Husholdningssalt (Danish Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Husholdningssalt" in Danish language version.

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about.com

chemistry.about.com

  • "February 22, 2016, about.com: What Is Table Salt?". Arkiveret fra originalen 25. december 2016. Hentet 11. juni 2016.

heart.org

sodiumbreakup.heart.org

  • heart.org: Sea Salt vs Table Salt Arkiveret 8. juni 2016 hos Wayback Machine Citat: "...“It's very important for people to be aware that sea salt often has as much sodium as table salt,” said Rachel K. Johnson, Ph.D., R.D., an American Heart Association spokeswoman and the Bickford Professor of Nutrition at the University of Vermont...While some attributes may make sea salt more attractive from a marketing standpoint, Dr. Johnson says there are no real health advantages of most sea salts...."

howstuffworks.com

science.howstuffworks.com

  • howstuffworks.com: What if you drink saltwater? Citat: "...That's because a cell's membrane is semipermeable -- although sodium, chloride and other substances may not be able to easily diffuse in and out of the cell, water can. When the salt concentration is higher on the outside of our cells than on the inside, water moves from the inside to the outside of the cells to correct the imbalance. The attempt to equalize the concentrations of matter on both sides of a semipermeable membrane is called osmosis..."

illvid.dk

mayoclinic.org

oceanplasma.org

  • oceanplasma.org: Chemistry of Seawater Arkiveret 14. maj 2016 hos Wayback Machine Citat: "...Since a red blood cell has a salt concentration of about 0.89%, putting it into hypertonic solution (>0.89%) would pull water out of the cell; putting it into a hypotonic solution (<0.89%) would cause water to flow into the cell, making it swell to bursting; putting it into an isotonic solution (=0.89%) would have no effect...Average ocean water has a salinity of 35g of dissolved salts. Expressed in %, it would be 96.5% pure water molecules and 3.5% of salts..."

ordnet.dk

retsinformation.dk

sciencedaily.com

videnskab.dk

  • 09 april 2014, videnskab.dk: Forsker: De færreste spiser for meget salt Citat: "...Selvom myndighederne anbefaler, at vi kun spiser 5 til 6 g salt om dagen, kan du faktisk spise dobbelt så meget uden at sætte helbredet på spil. Sådan konkluderer overlæge Niels Graudal fra Rigshospitalet efter at have gennemgået en lang række studier, der har set på sammenhængen mellem salt og dødelighed..."

web.archive.org

  • heart.org: Sea Salt vs Table Salt Arkiveret 8. juni 2016 hos Wayback Machine Citat: "...“It's very important for people to be aware that sea salt often has as much sodium as table salt,” said Rachel K. Johnson, Ph.D., R.D., an American Heart Association spokeswoman and the Bickford Professor of Nutrition at the University of Vermont...While some attributes may make sea salt more attractive from a marketing standpoint, Dr. Johnson says there are no real health advantages of most sea salts...."
  • "February 22, 2016, about.com: What Is Table Salt?". Arkiveret fra originalen 25. december 2016. Hentet 11. juni 2016.
  • oceanplasma.org: Chemistry of Seawater Arkiveret 14. maj 2016 hos Wayback Machine Citat: "...Since a red blood cell has a salt concentration of about 0.89%, putting it into hypertonic solution (>0.89%) would pull water out of the cell; putting it into a hypotonic solution (<0.89%) would cause water to flow into the cell, making it swell to bursting; putting it into an isotonic solution (=0.89%) would have no effect...Average ocean water has a salinity of 35g of dissolved salts. Expressed in %, it would be 96.5% pure water molecules and 3.5% of salts..."

wikipedia.org

en.wikipedia.org