Electrolytes Explained: Sodium, Potassium, and Magnesium (When Each One Actually Matters)
Electrolytes are often treated like a single concept. In reality, sodium, potassium, and magnesium solve different problems — and confusing them is one of the fastest ways to feel worse instead of better.
Why Electrolyte Confusion Is So Common
Many symptoms overlap across electrolyte issues: fatigue, cramps, dizziness, headaches, low energy. Because the symptoms look similar, people often supplement the wrong thing — or stack electrolytes blindly.
Electrolytes don’t work by volume. They work by balance.
Sodium: When the Problem Is Volume, Not Calm
Sodium is most closely tied to:
Blood volume: how well you hold onto fluids.
Fluid balance: especially under sweat loss or high water intake.
Blood pressure stability: the “standing up without getting dizzy” piece.
Low sodium often shows up as:
Dizziness on standing: especially with low blood pressure tendencies.
Headaches: particularly around sweating or heavy water intake.
Fatigue that improves with fluids: a hydration-stability clue.
Sodium issues are common in people who drink large amounts of water, sweat heavily, or eat a very low-salt diet.
Potassium: When Muscles and Nerves Feel Unstable
Potassium plays a central role in:
Muscle contraction: performance, cramping tendencies, “heavy legs.”
Nerve signaling: electrical stability and responsiveness.
Cellular balance: helping cells maintain normal electrical gradients.
Low potassium often presents as:
Muscle cramps: especially during activity or after sweating.
Weakness: more “flat” output than tight tension.
Irregular heartbeat sensations: a symptom that deserves caution and context.
Potassium issues are often dietary — and commonly mistaken for magnesium deficiency.
Magnesium: When the Nervous System Won’t Settle
Magnesium is commonly used for:
Nervous system regulation: calmer baseline, easier downshift.
Muscle relaxation: less tightness and twitching.
Stress response support: a steadier “reaction threshold.”
Low magnesium often feels like:
Poor sleep: difficulty winding down.
Tension or twitching: the body doesn’t fully relax.
Difficulty relaxing: feeling “on” even when tired.
Magnesium deficiencies are common — but choosing the wrong form creates confusion.
Why “Electrolyte Stacking” Often Backfires
Many electrolyte products combine sodium, potassium, and magnesium without considering individual needs. That can sound convenient, but it can also make results inconsistent.
Masks the real deficiency: you never learn which lever mattered.
Creates new imbalances: adding what you don’t need can shift the balance.
Leads to inconsistent results: different days need different ratios.
Electrolytes work best when targeted — not bundled indiscriminately.
How to Tell Which Electrolyte You Actually Need
Start with the dominant symptom. Add only what’s necessary. Keep changes clean enough to learn from.



