Side-by-side comparison of mechanisms, dosing, interactions, and stacking potential.
| Electrolyte Complex (Sodium, Potassium, Magnesium) | Essential Amino Acids | |
|---|---|---|
| Category | Training Compounds | Training Compounds |
| Standard Dose | Varies by activity level: 500-1500mg sodium, 200-400mg potassium, 100-200mg magnesium per liter of fluid during exercise | — |
| Timing | Before, during, and after exercise. Daily electrolyte support for low-carb/ketogenic diets (increased electrolyte excretion). First thing in morning for general hydration. | — |
| Cycle Duration | ongoing during training; increased during heat, prolonged exercise, or ketogenic diet | — |
| Evidence Level | strong_human | Strong |
Electrolytes maintain critical physiological functions: Sodium (Na+) is the principal extracellular cation regulating plasma volume, blood pressure (via RAAS system), nerve impulse conduction (fast sodium channels), and glucose absorption (SGLT1 co-transporter). Potassium (K+) maintains resting membrane potential via Na+/K+-ATPase, essential for cardiac rhythmicity and muscle contraction. Magnesium (Mg2+) is required for ATP function (Mg-ATP), muscle relaxation (calcium antagonism), and >600 enzymatic reactions. Sweat contains ~40-60 mmol/L sodium, ~4-8 mmol/L potassium, and trace magnesium. Hyponatremia from excessive water intake without sodium replacement during prolonged exercise is potentially fatal.
Varies by activity level: 500-1500mg sodium, 200-400mg potassium, 100-200mg magnesium per liter of fluid during exercise
Before, during, and after exercise. Daily electrolyte support for low-carb/ketogenic diets (increased electrolyte excretion). First thing in morning for general hydration.
ongoing during training; increased during heat, prolonged exercise, or ketogenic diet
Provides the full substrate set required for muscle protein synthesis, especially useful when whole-protein feeding is constrained.
Take our free assessment to get personalized recommendations based on your health goals, current stack, and biomarkers.
Get Your Free Protocol →or take the assessment →