Yes Dave, and as much tea & coffee as we can manage.Andy,
you get supplied with cool drinks?
Interesting - my wife gets bad cramp if she has too much salt. Too much for her that is, we hardly use any. Our postgrad biochemist daughter suggested she take magnesium, either as a supplement or just some epsom salts in her bath, and that seems to help.My brother (paramedic) advised me to up my salt intake after telling him I was suffering a lot from cramp.
Thanks for that Pete, I get cramp in the calf , only in the left leg. Got some magnesium tablets so will try.Interesting - my wife gets bad cramp if she has too much salt. Too much for her that is, we hardly use any. Our postgrad biochemist daughter suggested she take magnesium, either as a supplement or just some epsom salts in her bath, and that seems to help.
Pete

It can be a good idea: close up your windows and doors to keep the heat out, then only open them when the outside temperature drops to near that indoors. As long as you can keep the sun off them, of course, else you’d only be cooking yourself insideThe last thing you need to be doing is sealing up the house in weather like this!
Andy instead of upping your table salt per say, go for these (or similar). They are active hydrators that contain the right sort of balance of electrolytes, without just firing you sodium levels up which will have the adverse effect. You will find them in the in the 'Health food' isle of most supermarkets or any pharmacy. These will stop the cramps, without putting your cardiovascular systems at risk.Yes Dave, and as much tea & coffee as we can manage.
My brother (paramedic) advised me to up my salt intake after telling him I was suffering a lot from cramp. I need to be careful with that though. A family history of serious heart / circulatory issues means I ought to keep it down, or I'll join generations that have died in their mid 50's.
I'm hoping I've got more than a few years left in me lol

And I have googled RLS and just jumped for joy reading this!!! I occasionally (almost exclusively at night, or when I have been on a long flight) get what I can only describe as pulsing tingling down my left leg and into my foot. It drives me mad...not painful, just unbearable, and I have to clench/tense my lower leg/foot to relieve it. Will then get it again 5-10 mins later. For hours at a time. I have tried to explain it to people, doctors included, in the past, but no one has had a clue what I was on about. I think this sounds like it fits the bill perfectly! Just need to know how to get rid of it now!Thanks Pete, I'll have a look into magnesium. A quick check shows it might help my Restless Leg Syndrome too.
scalemodelling.co.uk is a privately operated online discussion forum. All content posted by members reflects their own views and opinions and does not necessarily represent those of the forum owners or administrators. While reasonable efforts are made to moderate content, no responsibility is accepted for user-generated material. By using this site, you agree to comply with UK law and the forum rules.