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Incendas1 t1_j6moe6p wrote

Salt water is too salty and saline is just right.

When you are dehydrated you also lose salts/electrolytes which are not exactly the same as sea water, for example.

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[deleted] t1_j6mprim wrote

[removed]

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Cubusphere t1_j6mq5xh wrote

No. Saline is exactly what your body needs in terms of water and sodium chloride (table salt), sea water is way too much salt, distilled water a bit too little.

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nrron t1_j6mujhn wrote

ElI5 isn’t a guessing game and you’re wrong

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KingKongDuck t1_j6mq1yn wrote

No, it's to do with best absorption of the water which saline provides. Not about making you thirsty or otherwise.

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Incendas1 t1_j6mqk9q wrote

We have salt in our bodies and that's necessary as well. So when you're dehydrated you lose both water and salts.

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twotall88 t1_j6mrkph wrote

No, to be actually hydrated you need to consume salts that include sodium, calcium, potassium, chloride, phosphate, and magnesium. If your diet is deficient in that and all you drink is H2O/water then you will still be dehydrated while urinating a lot.

In fact, for your kidneys to function properly they need to basically be full of sodium.

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Hatedbythemasses t1_j6n15g5 wrote

Why not just read the link it would take just as much time to read the link and find out on your own as it did to ask others to tell you.

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Vogel-Kerl t1_j6mp5ga wrote

Normal saline is 0.9% sodium chloride.

That's 9 grams of NaCl in one liter of water. This is isotonic to your blood.

Sea water has ~35 grams per liter, almost 4 times as much.

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BigFootV519 t1_j6mroq0 wrote

Its all about concentration. Saline is meant to match the body's natural level of electrolytes. It's the same reason sport drinks like Gatorade contain electrolytes. They can replenish fluid levels without disrupting the electrolytes balance.

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DTux5249 t1_j6pdzcb wrote

Some important concepts

  1. Salt sucks up water. Water draws out salts. This is known as osmosis.

  2. Your body Is a bag of salty soup. We call these body salts "electrolytes". You need electrolytes to live, and the electrolytes need water to be useful..

  3. Your body pees regularly to get rid of stuff it doesn't need. Your body will always need to pee, regardless of how many electrolytes that water holds

  4. Sea water is MUCH saltier than Saline

In short, you need to keep a balancing act. You need a certain amount of electrolytes to function, and you need a certain amount of water to hold those electrolytes. Your body uses water for different things tho, so you need to keep that balanced.

When you drink sea water, the water is MUCH saltier than your body. Instead of your body absorbing the water, the salt sucks water out of you, and you pee it out. Your body has less water at the end of the day.

If you drink pure, unsalted water though, the opposite happens. You drink the water, your body is saltier than the water. The water sucks out salt from your body, and you pee it out. You loose electrolytes.

Now, you don't wanna lose water. Dehydration causes a tone of issues. You also don't wanna lose electrolytes. That can cause just as many issues

Saline is a happy balance. it's only a little less saltier than your body, which means your body can take in water, pee it out, and lose little to no electrolytes. This lets someone who's dehydrated gradually rehydrate, without a drastic change in anything else.

This gradual change is often really important, because your body isn't a machine. It slowly adapts to extreme changes like starvation and dehydration to help you stay alive in those states. Quickly changing their intake (like giving a severely dehydrated person a gallon of fresh water) can really mess their body up if they aren't gradually introduced to it.

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ShankThatSnitch t1_j6n3vrr wrote

Sea water is waaaaaaay salter than saline. We need enough salt(electrolytes) to be able to conduct bio-electrical signals, but too much salt causes water to be sucked out of our cells, as it equalizes the salinity across the water content of our body.

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Reviewingremy t1_j6mthsu wrote

Just to add on what other people have said, route of administration matters. Saline to treat dehydration is given intravenously not orally which is an important difference.

I read thing a few years back, people at sea on a liferaft survived by seawater enemas.

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tacetabbad0n t1_j6mud48 wrote

Your body requires salts to function. Without salts your neurons would cease to signal each other and the cells in your body would stop working.

If you just drunk ultra pure water you would die as it would flush the salts from your body.

The difference between a medicine and a poison is dosage. While sea water is saline and hydration fluids is saline, hydration fluids are 0.9% saline sea water sits around 35%.

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y0plattipus t1_j6mxqkd wrote

The ultra pure water thing is the myth that won't die.

If you are eating a balanced diet you can drink distilled/RO-DI water as your primary source and live a normal life.

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czbz t1_j6osaux wrote

Right, no-one has ever explained to me at what level of purity water would supposedly become dangerous.

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B239 t1_j6n6qhf wrote

There are recommended daily intakes of everything things your body needs including water, sodium, chloride, potassium, glucose, protein, vitamins etc. If you become dehydrated you have been losing mainly sodium and water, therefore both need replacing. Sea water has too much salt, too much salt damages your kidneys among other things.

When enough salt (sodium) is given, other intravenous fluids such as dextrose fluid (sugar water) is given, the limits for sugar are much higher than salt so it doesn't matter so much.

Additionally, giving pure water intravenously is not a good idea because if it doesn't have enough electrolytes or molecules like sodium or dextrose it can have an osmotic effect i.e. Water will move into the cells rather than stay in the veins where it is needed. This can swell and damage organs. Drinking pure water can cause this too but its less likely.

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[deleted] t1_j6ngxlo wrote

[removed]

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explainlikeimfive-ModTeam t1_j6nmqe5 wrote

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frustrated_staff t1_j6moywp wrote

False premise. Drinking salt water doesn't necessarily dehydrate the body. It's just that to avoid that particular effect, you have to drink much smaller quantities at a time, more consistently over long periods of time.

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