Guest guest Posted April 29, 2006 Report Share Posted April 29, 2006 While Jim Fixx may have been in great shape physically, he also insisted that his exercise would allow him to eat what ever he wanted. So, fit? yes.. healthy? I doubt it. Jeff Messenger with Voice. Make PC-to-Phone Calls to the US (and 30+ countries) for 2¢/min or less. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 29, 2006 Report Share Posted April 29, 2006 While Jim Fixx may have been in great shape physically, he also insisted that his exercise would allow him to eat what ever he wanted. So, fit? yes.. healthy? I doubt it. Jeff Messenger with Voice. Make PC-to-Phone Calls to the US (and 30+ countries) for 2¢/min or less. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 29, 2006 Report Share Posted April 29, 2006 wrote: > >> Second point is regarding salt and our friendly Tanitas. I eat hardly >> any, compared to the normal US eater, and the occasional variation in >> my salt intake might be related to the strange excursions I sometimes >> see in the reported BF%; I'm going to have to keep track of this. >> Thanks for bringing it up. > > I too keep a low-sodium diet, rarely venturing above the 1 g/day mark. > I should look back at my records and see if there is a consistent BF % > delta in the day(s?) following restaurant outings with family and friends. > Which direction are we guessing extra sodium will take BF %? Based on > 's comments below, it seems down? Is this the expectation? Anyway, > yes, let's get some more data points. > > Thanks, > - > www.zenpawn.com/vegblog > I wouldn't pay too much attention to Tanita readings. My speculation is that the swings I see are related to hydration levels and since salt also modulates retained water it may be difficult to parse out the electrical conductivity of salt in solution with total amount of water present, and not to make this even more conflicted pure water is not conductive without electrolytes added. I see enough short term variation to know that the Tanita is certainly not measuring actual fat. It'll only be as accurate as I (we) resemble the population they used to develop their algorithms, accuracy of their extrapolations for age/activity, and whether we as individuals match/control the sundry variables that apparently introduce errors. On the subject of salt wrt health, while I have said this before it may bear repeating. When we withdraw from the adlib, convenience, processed food supply we need to re-think generic dietary advice targeted toward that larger group of heavy salt consumers (along with sundry other unhealthy food issues). While not as common there is such a thing as too little salt as I am convinced I experience during summer months (due to perspiration losses) and very low dietary intake. If you are hypertensive and salt sensitive by all means restrict along with maybe considering other natural diuretics (but please don't self medicate casually). If like me with low BP (after losing my excess weight) and not inclined to automatically season everything with salt, one might need to eat a little. JR Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 29, 2006 Report Share Posted April 29, 2006 wrote: > >> Second point is regarding salt and our friendly Tanitas. I eat hardly >> any, compared to the normal US eater, and the occasional variation in >> my salt intake might be related to the strange excursions I sometimes >> see in the reported BF%; I'm going to have to keep track of this. >> Thanks for bringing it up. > > I too keep a low-sodium diet, rarely venturing above the 1 g/day mark. > I should look back at my records and see if there is a consistent BF % > delta in the day(s?) following restaurant outings with family and friends. > Which direction are we guessing extra sodium will take BF %? Based on > 's comments below, it seems down? Is this the expectation? Anyway, > yes, let's get some more data points. > > Thanks, > - > www.zenpawn.com/vegblog > I wouldn't pay too much attention to Tanita readings. My speculation is that the swings I see are related to hydration levels and since salt also modulates retained water it may be difficult to parse out the electrical conductivity of salt in solution with total amount of water present, and not to make this even more conflicted pure water is not conductive without electrolytes added. I see enough short term variation to know that the Tanita is certainly not measuring actual fat. It'll only be as accurate as I (we) resemble the population they used to develop their algorithms, accuracy of their extrapolations for age/activity, and whether we as individuals match/control the sundry variables that apparently introduce errors. On the subject of salt wrt health, while I have said this before it may bear repeating. When we withdraw from the adlib, convenience, processed food supply we need to re-think generic dietary advice targeted toward that larger group of heavy salt consumers (along with sundry other unhealthy food issues). While not as common there is such a thing as too little salt as I am convinced I experience during summer months (due to perspiration losses) and very low dietary intake. If you are hypertensive and salt sensitive by all means restrict along with maybe considering other natural diuretics (but please don't self medicate casually). If like me with low BP (after losing my excess weight) and not inclined to automatically season everything with salt, one might need to eat a little. JR Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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