THE SODIUM/POTASSIUM RATIO
by Dr. Lawrence Wilson
© April 2010, L. D. Wilson Consultants, Inc.
All
information in this article is for educational purposes only. It is not for the diagnosis, treatment,
prescription or cure of any disease or health condition.
An entire book could easily be written about the ratio of sodium to
potassium on a hair mineral analysis.
Dr. Eck called this ratio the vitality
ratio. Earlier in his life, he
called it the life-death ratio, as
it is so important. It could also be called the electrical ratio or the internal
ratio.
Dr.
Eck found that the ideal hair sodium/potassium ratio is about 2.4-2.5 up to
about 4-5. It is critical that the
hair is not washed at the laboratory for accurate
sodium and potassium readings.
Only Analytical Research Labs and Trace Minerals, Inc. offer the hair
mineral test without washing the hair at the laboratory. We much prefer Analytical Research Labs
as the graph is easier to read, the numbers may be more accurate, out of range numbers are automatically repeated at no charge and
their program recommendations are better.
THEMES BY WHICH TO UNDERSTAND THE SODIUM/POTASSIUM RATIO
Sodium
and potassium are both associated with the activity of the adrenal glands.
However, potassium is also more influenced by
the activity of the thyroid gland. One might say that sodium is more of a
pure adrenal indicator, although all the minerals affect each other to a
degree. Meanwhile, potassium often
reflects imbalances associated with thyroid problems, which are very common
today. Dr. Eck said that potassium
is needed to sensitize the tissues to thyroid hormone.
Sodium
is forward-moving,
and associated with adrenal stress. Potassium is more associated with backward-movement, a concept explained
below in more detail. However, it
is associated with slow forward movement
when less than about 5 mg%.
Sodium
is more about basic strength and power,
such as that found in the adrenal glands.
This is more related to the first and second physical energy centers of
the physical body.
Potassium
is more about impulsiveness and
willfulness, as represented by the thyroid gland and the fourth and fifth energy centers of the
physical body. For more details,
read The Energy Centers.
Sodium covers and protects potassium.
When sodium is high relative to potassium, for example, a person
generally has plenty of power or energy with which to function and express
oneÕs will. When the ratio is low,
however, there is not enough power to cover the willfulness of the person. As a result, stress and disease often
set in and stress becomes chronic and more intense.
Potassium liberates and frees sodium. This means that potassium, the will or
higher will, uses and assists sodium - the adrenal energy, adaptive energy or
vitality of the person - to act.
A directional indicator of
the oxidation rate. A
high sodium/potassium ratio is more associated with a rising oxidation
rate. A low sodium/potassium ratio
is more associated with a collapsing or lowering of the oxidation rate. It is an excellent indicator.
Hormonal relationships.
Hormonal relationships are rough associations. However, they are very important and interesting
relationships. Among the adrenal
hormones, sodium is more associated with aldosterone,
while potassium is more related to cortisol and cortisone. Sodium is
more associated with the fast-acting
adrenal hormones, while potassium is more associated with the longer-acting or slower-acting adrenal hormones.
Among
the female hormones, sodium is more associated with estrogen levels, while potassium is more associated with progesterone levels. This can become important in conditions
such as premenstrual syndrome and estrogen dominance.
An inflammation indicator. Higher aldosterone than cortisol,
represented by a high sodium/potassium ratio, is more associated with
inflammation because aldosterone is a more inflammatory hormone, whereas cortisol
and cortisone are more anti-inflammatory hormones.
In
contrast, lower aldosterone and higher cortisol or cortisone levels,
represented by a lower sodium/potassium ratio, is more associated with a
degenerative state, rather than an inflammatory state. This may also be called a more catabolic
state, or one in which the body is breaking down tissue faster than it is
regenerating tissue. It is known that tissue breakdown and catabolism is one action
of cortisol and cortisone.
Other mineral relationships.
Zinc raises potassium and lowers sodium.
Copper raises sodium a little, and can lower potassium somewhat. There are other relationships as well,
such as the effects of manganese, chromium, selenium, vitamins and others on
the sodium/potassium ratio.
IMBALANCES IN THE SODIUM/POTASSIUM RATIO -
SYMPTOMS OF A HIGH NA/K RATIO
As
the sodium/potassium ratio rises on a hair mineral analysis above about 5 or perhaps 6, more symptoms involving this ratio are
likely to arise. These may include
a tendency for acute stress,
inflammation or pain somewhere in the body. Other
symptoms may include water retention,
edema, and perhaps a higher blood
pressure or a labile or fluctuating blood pressure due to water retention
and/or kidney stress. These are
among the prominent physical symptoms that come with higher aldosterone levels
in relation to cortisol, for example.
When
the ratio is above about 12, it is an indicator for liver and kidney stress in
some cases. Interestingly, this is found in a low sodium/potassium ratio as well.
The Na/K Ratio and PMS. In young
adult women, a high sodium/potassium ratio can be more associated with
high-estrogen premenstrual tension with symptoms of inflammation, anger, acne,
bloating and breast swelling and tenderness. As a general rule, the
sodium/potassium ratio rises before the menstrual period. For much more information about PMS,
read Premenstrual Syndrome.
Emotional and mental symptoms
of a high sodium/potassium ratio. These may include a tendency for anger or acute emotional stress. A mildly high ratio may also
indicate a forward-looking attitude,
moving ahead in life, and a more positive,
future-oriented approach to life.
Combinations.
A high sodium/potassium ratio may combine with other patterns and these may
alter its meaning a little, though usually not much. The main patterns it participates with are fast and slow oxidation rates, a hill pattern, and a double high ratio pattern. It is also commonly
found with a sympathetic dominance
pattern.
SYMPTOMS OF A LOW SODIUM/POTASSIUM RATIO
Physical symptoms.
Dr. Eck found that a low sodium/potassium ratio is associated with fatigue, sugar and carbohydrate
intolerance, allergies, adrenal weakness, chronic infections, liver and kidney
stress, cardiovascular stress, reduced immune response and possibly malignancy,
and a more catabolic state or state
of tissue breakdown.
The
physical and physiological imbalances above can be expanded
upon. For example, tissue
breakdown can cause arthritis, ulcers, and practically any other disease
depending upon where the tissue breakdown occurs. Cardiovascular stress can easily lead to a heart attack or
stroke, and so on.
Mental and emotional
symptoms. Dr Eck found
that a low sodium/potassium ratio is associated with negative thinking and
negative emotions in most cases.
Prominent among these are frustration,
resentment and hostility. It
is also associated with reduced awareness in many cases, chronic stress, and
Òbeating oneÕs head against a wall when the door is nearbyÓ.
When
the ratio is less than 1, often a person has hidden
traumas that he or she is not aware of.
The very low sodium/potassium ratio can perhaps be a protection against
feeling the pain of the trauma.
This can make the person appear to be less emotional, in fact. As the Na/K ratio approaches about 1 during correction on a nutritional balancing program, the
traumas may surface, causing more feelings of anger, depression or others as
the awareness grows.
Degree of low sodium/potassium
ratio important.
Both the physical and emotional symptoms tend to become more
pronounced as the sodium/potassium ratio becomes lower. A ratio less than about 2 is moderate,
while a ratio less than 1 is considered extreme.
SUMMARY
|
High
Na/K Ratio |
Low
Na/k Ratio |
Inflammation |
Greater tendency |
Less tendency |
Hormones |
Estrogen dominant |
Progesterone dom. |
Stress
tendency |
More acute stress |
More chronic stress |
Emotional
tendency |
Acute: anger, rage, acute stress |
Chronic: frustration, resentment,
hostility |
Tissue
reaction |
More reactive tissues and organism |
Less reactive, more fatigued |
Stage
of stress |
Earlier stages |
Later stages |
STRESS AND THE
SODIUM/POTASSIUM RATIO
Acute stress.
A high sodium/potassium ratio on a hair analysis is more associated with acute
stress. The reason is as
follows:
1) Acute
stress causes increased adrenal gland activity.
2) This results in
a rise in the secretion of the hormone aldosterone.
3) Aldosterone
secretion causes sodium to be retained in the body by
the kidneys. Thus the sodium level
in the soft tissues rises.
Sodium
retention by aldosterone is part of the alarm
reaction or fight-flight reaction
to stress. Early in the alarm
reaction, the potassium level remains low. Thus, on a tissue mineral test, the ratio of sodium to potassium is elevated early in the alarm stage
of stress.
Chronic stress.
In contrast, a low sodium/potassium
ratio is more associated with chronic stress and usually an
exhaustion stage of stress. This
is because a low sodium/potassium ratio is an indicator of adrenal weakness.
Acute stress or alarm reactions
in slow oxidation. Some people ask how it is
possible to have an alarm reaction if one is a slow oxidizer or in an
exhaustion stage of stress. The
answer is that fast and slow oxidation are indicators
or a more yang or more yin body situation or posturing. They are also associated with the alarm
and the exhaustion stages of stress according to the stress theory of disease.
However,
Dr. Eck found that within slow oxidation or an exhaustion stage of stress or a
yin condition, one can still mount an acute stress
response. This is
indicated by a high sodium/potassium ratio and is a common
occurrence. In fact, it is
essential if a person is to move out of slow oxidation.
Double acute stress. A fast oxidizer with a high
sodium/potassium ratio is a double inflammation pattern.
Double chronic stress. A slow oxidizer with a low sodium/potassium ratio means a
double exhaustion pattern, which is definitely less desirable.
MORE ON INFLAMMATION
Aldosterone
is a pro-inflammatory hormone. It tends to increase inflammation in
the body. Cortisol and cortisone,
associated more with potassium levels, are anti-inflammatory
hormones because they diminish inflammation. The pro and anti-inflammatory hormones must be in a good
balance with each other for optimum health.
A
person with a high sodium/potassium ratio may be secreting more aldosterone, in
relation to cortisol. Because
there is more pro-inflammatory hormone, a tendency
for inflammation exists in the body.
This is particularly true when the sodium/potassium ratio is greater
than 10:1.
Inflammation
can take the form of any 'itis', such as arthritis, bursitis, colitis, or
tendonitis. It is a tendency for
aches and pains. A high sodium/potassium
ratio is also a tendency for mental excitation. A ratio that persists between 3 and
6 suggests a forward-looking person.
A ratio greater than 6:1 suggests aggressiveness and anger.
A HIGH SODIUM/POTASSIUM RATIO AS A PRIMARY OR SECONDARY INDICATOR
OF SYMPATHETIC DOMINANCE
1.
If an ARL calibrated hair mineral chart indicates either:
a)
a four highs pattern or
b)
a particular three highs pattern (calcium > 40 mg%,
magnesium > 6 mg%, sodium > 25 mg% and potassium < 10 mg%), then a
sodium/potassium ratio greater than about 3 is often, but not always a primary indicator of sympathetic dominance. (This means that no other sympathetic
dominance indicator is required to know that the person needs a sympathetic
dominance program. The higher the
sodium/potassium ratio, the more likely that a sympathetic dominance program is needed.
2.
If the chart does not show either a four highs pattern or the three highs
pattern described in #1 above, then a hair sodium/potassium ratio above about 5 or 6 is a secondary
indicator only of a sympathetic
dominant mineral pattern. This
means that, of itself, it is not enough to indicate the need for a sympathetic
dominant nutritional balancing program.
It is merely a reinforcing indicator of sympathetic dominance.
Those
with a sympathetic dominant mineral pattern tend to be individuals who overuse
the sympathetic or fight-or-flight nervous system. They are usually very active, either mentally, physically or
both. The tendency is greater when
the Na/K ratio is above about 12.
These
people may overdo on exercise, run around a lot, worry a lot or, in some other
way, keep themselves in a fight-or-flight mode. Note that the body becomes exhausted from this tendency, and
has gone into a parasympathetic state of slow oxidation. However, the person keeps right on
using the sympathetic system instead of slowing down. This prevents the recovery of health. For more on this subject, please read
the article entitled Sympathetic Dominance.
SOME TOXIC METALS CAN ELEVATE THE SODIUM/POTASSIUM RATIO
Hidden or overt copper, cadmium and
mercury toxicity usually elevate
sodium levels and can cause a higher sodium/potassium ratio. This is true even if the cadmium or mercury
are hidden within body tissues and not revealed on the hair
test. As cadmium, copper or
mercury are eliminated, a retest mineral analysis will
reveal an improved sodium/potassium ratio.
An
exception is if a retest is performed during a toxic metal elimination. The sodium/potassium ratio may
temporarily rise or fall as any toxic metal is being
eliminated. This occurs
because the metals irritate the kidneys.
This may cause the sodium/potassium ratio to be
temporarily skewed. The
ratio will normalize when the metal elimination is complete.
ALUMINUM TOXICITY, ALONG WITH BIOUNAVAILABLE IRON AND/OR MANGANESE
CAN ELEVATE THE SODIUM/POTASSIUM RATIO
A
higher ratio of sodium to potassium may also be due to an accumulation of toxic
amounts of aluminum in the body.
This will elevate the Na/K ratio, as will an excess of biologically
unavailable manganese or iron.
This is a very common situation, and true in practically all slow
oxidizers. The metals appear to be
in the form of oxides, which are damaging and can cause oxidant damage and
tissue irritation.
Manganese
and iron are not toxic metals.
However, when present in excess, usually in a biounavailable form, they
seem to raise the sodium level in relation to the potassium level. This may occur because they irritate
the adrenal glands, or perhaps the kidneys, or perhaps other structures, in
such a way as to alter the balance of sodium in relation to potassium.
We
know this because as excesses of these metals are eliminated,
the sodium to potassium ratio decreases, often substantially.
The amigos. Since they are often
found together in the body, these metals are called the amigos. One can read more about iron, manganese
and aluminum in the article entitled The Three
Amigos.
THE HILL AND BOWL PATTERNS
A
sodium/potassium ratio greater than about 4 or 5, in
combination with a calcium/magnesium ratio less than about 3-4, is called a hill pattern. The calcium,
magnesium, sodium and potassium levels on a calibrated graph, especially from
Analytical Research Laboratories, appear in the shape of a hill.
In
our experience, this is an indicator that one has Òturned a cornerÓ, moved on,
overcome some blockage, or some other change for the better has occurred.
Explanation.
The low calcium/magnesium ratio indicates a lack of defensiveness, or a certain
openness or strength of the personality.
The high sodium/potassium ratio indicates moving forward. Hair must not be
washed at the laboratory for accurate sodium and potassium
readings. This pattern appears to
be more reliable on retests, in general, than on initial hair tests. Also, it is
not always present, meaning that it is not as reliable a pattern as most of the
others on a hair mineral analysis.
The bowl pattern. This is a combination of a low
sodium/potassium ratio and a high calcium/magnesium ratio. It is essentially the opposite of the
hill pattern described above. It
is associated with feeling emotionally stuck. It combines defensiveness (a high calcium/magnesium ratio)
or an imbalanced lifestyle in some way, with frustration and resentment (a low
sodium/potassium ratio). They
combine to cause a person to feel stuck.
Fortunately,
the pattern usually goes away on its own with a nutritional balancing
program. This would indicate that
nutritional imbalances play an important role in the pattern. In some cases, however, it is more psychologically-caused. In these cases, the issues that created the pattern must be
undone for it do go away.
THE LOW SELF-ESTEEM PATTERN
SALT-EATING AND THE SODIUM/POTASSIUM RATIO
Many
people assume that a high sodium/potassium ratio indicates an excessive salt
intake. While possibly true, in many
instances salt eating has little impact upon the sodium/potassium ratio.
A
high ratio frequently occurs in people who consume no salt whatsoever! The main causes of a high
sodium/potassium ratio are excessive aldosterone secretion due to stress or anger,
toxic metals or a zinc and magnesium deficiency. Salt-eating plays a secondary role.
We
recommend everyone avoid table salt, which is a very poor quality food. One may have sea salt (unrefined salt),
which contains more magnesium and trace elements.
We
recommend limiting salt slightly when the sodium/potassium ratio is above 12,
especially if blood pressure is elevated.
However, it is not usually necessary to eliminate all salt from the
diet. Also,
sea salt is often tolerated much better than table salt.
KIDNEY AND LIVER STRESS AND THE IMMUNE RESPONSE
A
sodium/potassium ratio greater than about 10 or less than about 1.5 often
indicates kidney stress, liver stress and perhaps an impaired immune response.
A STEEP RISE IN
JUST THE SODIUM READING ON A RETEST MINERAL ANALYSIS
Usually, if the sodium rises a lot on a retest, the
potassium level will also rise. If
only the sodium rises significantly on a retest and the other macrominerals
remain about the same, possible causes are:
1. Certain kidney problems, especially not drinking enough
water.
2. Mercury toxicity.
3. Low self-esteem.
4. A lot of anger.
5. Excessive salt intake.
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