Why do boogers taste like salt




















One of these occurrences is a persistent salty taste. Below are some of the conditions that cause this salty taste and how you can combat it.

There are a lot of causes of the sensation of a salty taste. Putting aside the actual presence of salt, causes can include:. You can see that the causes range from minor and very easily treatable i. Download a Free Guide to Home Care. A good first step is to analyze your behaviors and health and assess whether any known conditions could be causing the persistent salty taste.

Are you drinking enough water? Do you often have heartburn and other signs of acid reflux? Jun 19, 9, 1 0. You know you taste your own snot before and it has an salty taste! Why is that? Its not exactly nasty or good, but nor an daily drinker. Feb 2, 0 0. The human body is a salt mine and the nose is the shaft! Bootprint Diamond Member. Jan 11, 9, 0 0. Originally posted by: CTrainBEB every thing that comes out the body tastes like salt pretty much doesn't it?

Sep 13, 0 0. Mar 13, 13, 19 I hacked up some flegm the other day,ugh, it was salty,its close to "snot" lol. Glad this cold is just about gone now. Been fighting it for about a month! Jul 15, 80, 12, My blood tastes like iron.

Or is that everybody? All the kids need to do is just reach up onto their face and pluck them out. There's a good chance that the crusty snot in their nose is bothering them, they poke around to wrestle it from the nasal passage and then they see it there on the tip of their finger, knowing full well they need to do something with it.

The most socially acceptable thing after the totally socially unacceptable act of picking it would be to find a discreet tissue, napkin, or even a piece of toilet paper, wipe it off their fingers and deposit the whole thing in a trash can. But why do that when you can just gobble the whole thing down.

Are you grossed out yet? The truth is, there are some scientific theories that back some of these ideas up. In , University of Saskatchewan biochemistry professor Scott Nasser got a lot of attention for suggesting that eating boogers can actually boost your immune system and make you healthier, as Popular Science reported.

He theorized that the sweet taste was what attracted the kids to the booger eating, but what if all the pathogens that are in the snot, actually help to increase your bodies' immunity? It was an intriguing though, but Nasser wound up using it more to start classroom discussions on research and certainly grab his students' attention than to conduct an actual scientific study.

Besides, we go back to the fact that with all the snot you are already swallowing, it didn't make sense that more of it, even the crusty kind, would really make any difference to your immune system, as the Huffington Post reported.

Boogers, after all, is just dried mucus, so maybe it actually isn't as gross as we think.



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