Fresh avocados and potatoes on a table with nerve and muscle illustrations for a wellness article on potassium.
Fresh avocados and potatoes on a table with nerve and muscle illustrations for a wellness article on potassium.
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Wellness post spotlights potassium’s role as an electrolyte and points readers to food sources

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Fact checked

A Wellness Mama article published May 22, 2026, describes potassium as a major electrolyte involved in nerve and muscle function and suggests common foods—such as potatoes and avocados—as dietary sources.

A recent Wellness Mama post describes potassium as the body’s primary intracellular electrolyte—meaning most potassium is found inside cells—and says it helps support the electrical activity behind nerve impulses, muscle contraction and heart rhythm.

The article highlights food-first ways to increase potassium intake, listing potatoes (including sweet potatoes) and avocados among several potassium-rich options.

On daily intake, the post says estimates vary, with “many experts” suggesting adults need about 3,400 to 4,700 milligrams per day. U.S. health authorities, however, have published more specific adequate-intake figures that differ by sex: 3,400 mg/day for men and 2,600 mg/day for women ages 19 and older, according to summaries from the National Academies’ Food and Nutrition Board cited by MedlinePlus and a federal nutrition data brief.

Nutrition guidance has also shifted over time: an earlier National Academies recommendation set an adequate intake at 4.7 grams (4,700 mg) per day for adults, a figure that still appears in some references and in the Food and Drug Administration’s Daily Value for potassium on nutrition labels.

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