Pregnancy
Tip: Put Some Salt In Your Diet!
By Yvonne Lapp Cryns
Salt is a nutrient that is needed daily by all humans. It is most
important for proper cell maintenance andd creation and therefore
is a critical nutrient in the diet of a pregnant woman. As a pregnancy
progresses, a woman’s body will make additional blood (about
40 – 50% more) in order to ensure adequate oxygenation and
nutrition of the unborn baby. To do this, the body must retain
additional fluid and one of the properties of salt is fluid retention.
If salt is restricted during pregnancy, this additional blood
volume may not be made and the nutritional needs of the unborn
baby will not be met. This may occur because the placenta’s
growth is retarded or stopped or it may even peel off of the uterine
wall.
The unborn baby is
not the only one to suffer from too little salt. The pregnant
woman will be more prone to hypertension, toxemia and other nutritionally
derived diseases. Women who are put on low salt diets in the mistaken
belief that this will keep them from retaining fluid and swelling,
or keep their blood pressure down frequently become more edemic,
rapidly gain weight from the water retention and find their blood
pressures soaring. These are normal body responses to a salt deficiency
and a coping mechanism to restore the necessary balance in the
system.
When a woman
meets her daily salt need by “salting to taste”, her
body retains the correct amount of fluid to meet its needs and
the excess salt is removed from the body via the kidneys. Edema
in well-nourished women is not pathologic and may, in fact, have
some benefits for the mother and baby.
Yvonne Cryns has degrees
in nursing and law. She is the co-founder of Nursing Programs
Online.com - http://www.nursingprogramsonline.com/,and Midwives.net
- http://www.midwives.net/ Yvonne also produced a video about
midwives: http://www.compleatmother.com/video2.htm Yvonne is a
nationally-credentialed CPM, a professional homebirth midwife.
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