LATEST SODIUM STUDY
It’s long been
known that eating too much salt will raise your blood pressure, but a
comprehensive global study now says that too little salt in your diet also can
harm your heart health.
There appears to be a
“sweet spot” for daily sodium intake between 3 grams and 6 grams — equal to 7.5
grams to 15 grams of salt — associated with a lower risk of death and heart
disease than either more or less, researchers report.
“We found that too high
levels of sodium are harmful, but also eating a low amount of sodium is
harmful,” said study co-author Andrew Mente, an assistant professor of clinical
epidemiology and biostatistics at McMaster University in Ontario. “Having a
moderate level of intake is associated with the least amount of harm.”
The findings run counter
to current guidelines for heart disease prevention, which recommend a maximum
sodium intake of 1.5 grams to 2.4 grams per day. That’s equivalent to a maximum
of just under half a teaspoon of table salt per day.
“Only one in 20 people
in the world eat currently what is recommended,” Mente said. “It indicates that
we are making recommendations that most people can’t meet. It’s not a practical
recommendation. This suggests that rather than focusing on sodium, we should
focus on eating an overall healthy diet and pursuing healthy lifestyle
changes.”
Limiting salt
consumption is difficult given that 80 percent of a person’s daily salt intake
comes from the foods they eat, rather than the salt shaker, he said.
The researchers’
findings are included in papers published in the Aug. 14 issue of the New
England Journal of Medicine. One examines the relationship between salt
intake and blood pressure, while another looks at salt and risk of death or
heart disease.
More than 100,000 people
from 18 countries participated in the study. Estimates of salt intake were
based on urine tests that showed how much sodium the participants excreted. The
study is called the Prospective Urban Rural Epidemiology (PURE) investigation.
The American Heart
Association (AHA) questions the validity of the studies. It says it will stand
by its current recommendation of less than 1.5 grams per day for ideal heart
health.
“The AHA has been
concerned about the quality of these studies and strongly believes that other
types of evidence, particularly the well-documented clinical trial relationship
of sodium intake and blood pressure, provide the best scientific basis to guide
policy,” said Dr. Elliott Antman, president of the heart association. “The bulk
of the available evidence to date shows reduced sodium intake is associated
with reduced blood pressure, which itself is associated with a reduction in
cardiovascular event.”
Antman pointed to a
third study in the journal, which said that excessive salt consumption may
cause 1.65 million cardiovascular disease deaths every year. In that study, led
by Dr. Dariush Mozaffarian at the Harvard School of Public Health, the deaths
were linked to sodium intake greater than 2 grams per day — the limit set by
the World Health Organization.
“In the U.S. alone,
almost 57,600 annual cardiovascular deaths are attributed to sodium intake at
this level,” Antman said.
In looking at the link
between salt and blood pressure, Mente said his PURE colleagues were surprised
to find no straight-line relationship. Reducing dietary salt beyond a certain
point appears to do no good for blood pressure, and may even do harm.
“We found if you eat a
high amount of sodium, lowering your sodium has a large effect on your blood
pressure,” he said. “But if you have an average sodium diet, lowering your
sodium further won’t have much impact on your blood pressure.”
Too much salt raises
blood pressure by causing your body to retain water, said Dr. Suzanne Oparil,
director of the vascular biology and hypertension program at the University of
Alabama at Birmingham School of Medicine.
The extra water causes
blood volume to expand, which increases the internal pressure placed on blood
vessels. This pressure can cause arteries to harden, which in turn increases
risk for heart attack or stroke.
The PURE investigators
verified that too much salt does increase a person’s risk of heart disease and
death. In particular, excess salt harms the health of people who have high
blood pressure, are obese, or are seniors.
But too little salt in
your diet also appears to be harmful, they found. Sodium intake of less than 3
grams per day was tied to a 27 percent increased risk of death and heart
disease, according to their findings.
“Nobody exactly knows
why,” said Oparil, who wrote an editorial accompanying the studies. “It could
be that you need a certain amount of blood volume, and excessively low blood
pressure can be harmful, or it may be something else.”
Oparil isn’t surprised
that the heart association disputes the findings. “They believe in limiting
salt,” she said, adding that these new studies indicate that otherwise healthy
people may not need to track their sodium intake.
“If they do not have
hypertension [high blood pressure] and they are not obese, and are younger,
they really shouldn’t worry too much about salt,” she said. “They should do
other good things, like have high levels of physical activity and eat a healthy
diet. There’s no demonstrable benefit of extreme sodium reduction, and we
shouldn’t be so focused on it.”
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