Kumar said:
1. Organic compounds or structural side of body will be lost when we ash the body. But minerals will be left which may represent most of the functional side of body.
It's impossible to say that one component of the body is more important than another, in that you're just as dead if you have no calcium, as if you have no lipids or proteins. Nevertheless, to say that the miniral content is "most of the functional side of the body" is completely incorrect, not to mention crazy. You need to find out some of the basics of biochemistry and physiology before you make statements like this.
Kumar said:
2. Minerals will be found in salt/compound form not in ionic/elemental form on ash analysis.
Please stop saying "elemental" - as I said before, that refers to the uncharged, metallic form. There is no elemental sodium in the body, wet or ashed, trust me. Also, salts
are ionic. What you mean is that on ashing, electrolytes will be associated as salts rather than dissociated in solution. Yes. So what? With the exception of bone, they are dissociated in the body, and the forms in which they associate on ashing may have nothing to do with what is present in the live organism. Nevertheless, they are still the same ions.
Kumar said:
3. I think these salts can be constitued differantly ( but just similar in every specimen of same part) in differant parts/organs of the body. Then, how EC/IC composition of whole body will resemble with EC/IC of differant parts or tissues.
While there are major differences between ECF and ICF, leaving bone aside for now, there isn't going to be a lot of difference between most organs.
Kumar said:
4. IF differant specimens of differant parts/organs of differant bodies shows just similar minerals/salt composition then it is(salt composition) relevant with that part functions?
This is so simplistic I don't think it's possible to answer it. You need to know about sodium/potassium pumps and calcium channels and the intricate working of the body at the molecular level. Just thinking about a crude ash analysis is virtually meaningless in the context of function.
Kumar said:
5. Tissue salts system is more functional based i.e, by correcting the functional side, structural side will automatically be taken care off.
No. Tissue salts system is delusion-based. You are imagining it. There is absolutely nothing that these tiny amounts of common-place substances can do to improve the function of the body. And this is not going to change by going on discussing fanciful and imaginary mechanisms of action.
Kumar said:
6. I ,sometimes, doubt if cell membrane & some other so called pure organic structure in body are purely organic & may reflect differantly on ash & normal wet anylysis. It is just as assumption.
Well, when something is well-known, don't assume, go and find out. The cell membrane may be thought of as a lipid bilayer with "icebergs" of protein floating in it. Some of these proteins form channels which can transport hormones or some minerals/electrolytes into or out of the cell, while others transmit information by changing in shape. Ashing it, as Flume said, is going to vaporise most of the content and all of the structure. This and lots more really interesting stuff can be found in the basic science books we keep urging you to read.
Rolfe.