Salt Water Flush as a Natural Cleansing Method

Is a Salt Water Flush Cleansing Your System or Poisoning It?

By Lisa, published Dec 12, 2007
Published Content: 70  Total Views: 70,153  Favorited By: 10 CPs
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You've seen the instructions--take a quart of warm water, disolve a couple of spoons of salt into it and drink it as quickly as possible. Presto! Thrity minutes later, you're in a mad dash for the bathroom to purge "toxins", "parasites" and "impurities" via a very, very watery stool.

It's called a salt water flush and it's one of the hottest trends in do-it-yourself medicine. But is a salt water flush safe? Could a salt water flush be dangerous?

Here's what those websites don't tell you about the practice known as a salt water flush.

You're Not "Cleansing" Your Body--You're Simply Loading It With Sodium

A single teaspoon of salt contains around 2300 mg of sodium. That's more than most doctors recommend you consume over the course of an entire day. But a salt water flush typically doesn't just use one teaspoon--most "flushers" recommend two spoonfulls or more. That means that you're asking your body to process--in a relatively short span of time--more than twice as much sodium as you would normally eat in every meal of your day combined.

The diarrhea you experience as a result of a salt water flush isn't evidence of your body's attempt to rid itself of parasites, pollutants and toxic buildup. Your body is simply trying to purge itself of excess sodium as quickly as possible.

Salt Water Flushing Isn't "Natural"

Dr. Andrew Weil stops short of calling salt water flushing dangerous, but in a recent Q&A segment on his website he expressed concern over the amount of sodium consumed during a flush. And Dr. Weil also reminds his clients that your body does a fairly good job of "detoxing" all by itself. Contrary to claims made on websites, blogs and discussion forums around the 'net, you don't need to subject your body to such an extreme experience to be healthy.

Potential Long-Term Dangerous of Salt Water Flushes

While your body needs some sodium to function properly, most Americans get more sodium then they actually need. Excessive sodium intake has been linked to the development of kidney stones, high blood pressure and other health problems.

Takeaways
  • Sat water flushing uses more than double your daily intake of sodium.
  • Excessive salt intake has been linked to high blood pressure, kidney disease and other problems.
Did You Know?
Salt water flushing was first popularized by Master Cleanse author Stanley Burroughs.
Comments
Showing Comments 1 - 3 of 3
 
 
The peculiar thing is that my heart rate usually goes down to normal levels after I've done a SWF, plus that my hands stop to itch(eczema) and my fatigue goes away :). SWF is the only thing that I found to bring me immediate relief. Also it's recommended to use a natural salt that hasn't been stripped away of its minerals, because its more gentle on the body and it tastes much better. Rock salt like Himalayan salt or a good grade sea salt, are good choices. Table salt should not be used.

Posted on 07/03/2008 at 10:07:04 AM

 
typical closed mindedness without any real supporting facts. this technique has actually been in practice as a component of ayurvedic medicinal practice for thousands of years, and the benefits are immediately manifest to anyone who tries it. but then again it's hard for pharmaceutical companies to derive any benefit from this, so of course modern medical science discourages it. try it for yourself and make a judgment based on experience.

Posted on 06/10/2008 at 12:06:09 PM

 
Interesting viewpoint.

Posted on 12/13/2007 at 6:12:54 PM

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