Hypothyroidism is a lack of iodine or a specific kind of salt.
Sure. Go for it.
Table Salt
This salt is refined and used as table salt or for industrial use.
Sugar (table sugar) is an element that we use to make food sweet. Salt is also a compound, we use salt (table salt) for many things.
Any serious difference exist between kosher salt and standard table salt.
Yes.
Regular table salt.
Because its saltierr :]
No. You should use aquarium salt, sold at pet stores.
Due to the high incidence of goiters (hypothyroidism) in some midwestern states of the U.S., salt was iodized to prevent hypothyroidism from occuring. Iodine is important in the synthesis of thyroid hormones by the thyroid gland. With iodine deficiencies, too many Americans, in the central U.S. especially, were developing hypothyroidism. This has been corrected, from a public health policy standpoint, by requiring that salt is iodized. (However, there are alternatives available, nowadays in markets, for those who wish no iodine in their salt.)
The same chemical compound: sodium chloride (NaCl); but salt in seas, oceans, lakes, mines is not as pure as table salt for humans use etc.