Mimicry
Senior Member
- Messages
- 120
I started keto diet six days ago to see if it improves my chronic migraines, and I have a problem with salt/electrolytes. As some you might know, keto diet causes your body to dump more salt into urine, and you need extra electrolytes to compensate for that. I already have a problem with salt and keto has made it much worse. For the last several years I've had muscle aches and fasciculations, weakness, palpitations, nausea and vomiting that usually (not always, because some of those are my basic PEM symptoms) resolve with salt water (I also mix in some licorice root powder to help my body retain the salt). I need 2-3 tsp of extra salt to keep the salt deficiency and hyperkalemia symptoms at bay. Doctors refuse to test my aldosterone levels, and where I live you need a referral for aldosterone labs, so I can't just have it done without a doctor's approval.
Now, I recently read a research paper about a study where they tested aldosterone levels on participants who were put on keto diet. Apparently keto raised the aldosterone levels significantly. Do you think I should keep doing keto to see if that happens or is it too dangerous?
I would ask my doctor but they seriously don't care. I'm debating on whether I should go see a private endocrine doctor when I have enough money because I'm really getting concerned about the salt thing.
Edit. I have low cortisol levels but the results of my ACTH response test three years ago were normal so I'm guessing I might have some sort of hypopituitarism instead of Addison's disease. They didn't examine me any further or order labs to see if my ACTH levels are normal. The salt problem has been getting worse after that, especially after I contracted covid over a year ago.
Now, I recently read a research paper about a study where they tested aldosterone levels on participants who were put on keto diet. Apparently keto raised the aldosterone levels significantly. Do you think I should keep doing keto to see if that happens or is it too dangerous?
I would ask my doctor but they seriously don't care. I'm debating on whether I should go see a private endocrine doctor when I have enough money because I'm really getting concerned about the salt thing.
Edit. I have low cortisol levels but the results of my ACTH response test three years ago were normal so I'm guessing I might have some sort of hypopituitarism instead of Addison's disease. They didn't examine me any further or order labs to see if my ACTH levels are normal. The salt problem has been getting worse after that, especially after I contracted covid over a year ago.
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