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The
SCD™ Knowledge Base
Electrolytes
Elaine writes:
An electrolyte broadly means that if you put it in a solution, it will
divide and one half will carry a negative charge and the other a positive
charge. For example, salt is sodium chloride and when put into a solution,
divides into positively charged sodium and negatively charged chloride
ions. The most important electrolytes in the body (and when we talk about
the body, we talk on the cellular level) are potassium, magnesium, phosphate,
sulfate, bicarbonate and small quantities of sodium and chloride. Each
of the above substances exist in the watery parts of the cell (the protoplasm)
and provide a charged particle of sodium (for example) which are absolutely
essential for cellular reactions.
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