CHEMGRADE
///
FASTINGPERFORMANCEHYDRATION

Electrolyte Osmolarity for Fasting

2025-03-17//READ: 4 MIN//BY CHEMGRADE RESEARCH

The Natriuresis of Fasting

When you stop eating carbs, insulin levels drop significantly. Insulin signals the kidneys to retain sodium. When insulin drops, the kidneys rapidly dump sodium into the urine (Natriuresis). Water follows the sodium. This is why you lose "water weight" quickly—but it causes headaches, fatigue, and dizziness.

The Sodium Fear

Most people fear salt. During fasting, salt is your lifeline. Without adequate sodium, your blood volume drops (hypovolemia), causing your heart rate to spike (orthostatic hypotension). You do not need sugar; you need salt.

Fasting Hydration Protocol

Per 2 liters of water, add:
2000mg Sodium (approx 1 tsp High-Quality Salt)
400mg Potassium (Potassium Chloride)
300mg Magnesium (Malate or Glycinate)
Sip slowly. Do not chug, or you will trigger a "salt flush" (diarrhea).

* This analysis is for educational purposes only. ChemGrade does not provide medical advice.

Clinical Context

This compound is frequently utilized in the Sleep Optimization and Cortisol Management protocols.

View Protocol