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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

In absence of heart disease, sodium may not be so bad

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Moderate consumption of sodium may not affect the risk for cardiovascular problems in people without heart disease, a 21-country study suggests.


Researchers tracked nearly 96,000 adults without heart disease for an average of eight years. Even when people consumed more than double the recommended limit of two grams of sodium per day, they didn’t have a higher risk of serious cardiovascular events like heart attack, stroke or death.


The exception was in China. There, in 80 per cent of communities, the average sodium intake was nearly three times the two-gram limit. Consuming that much was linked to a small increased stroke risk, the study team reports in The Lancet.


“In the study of 255 communities around the world on five continents, we found that sodium is not associated with major cardiovascular disease or mortality. In fact, there’s an inverse association with all-cause mortality, so higher sodium (was) related to lower mortality,” lead author Andrew Mente of McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario, said in a phone interview.


The positive link between sodium and stroke was seen only at very high levels of sodium, above five grams per day, Mente said.


The American Heart Association recommends no more than 1.5 grams of sodium per day for people at risk for heart disease. To prevent heart disease, the World Health Organization (WHO) recommends a limit of two grams of sodium daily, which is the amount in roughly one teaspoon of salt.


Mente’s team analysed data on adults ages 35 to 70 in high-, middle- and low-income countries.


In 80 per cent of countries, half of the people consumed an average three grams to 5 grams of sodium per day. But only at the highest end of that range was each additional gram of sodium linked to an increase in systolic blood pressure of three millimeters of mercury (mm/Hg). (Systolic pressure, the “top” number, reflects pressure in blood vessels when the heart beats.)


Sodium intake was associated with major cardiovascular events only in communities where half of the people consumed at least 5.75 mg per day. But even here, the association was not statistically significant, meaning the results could have been due to chance.


“Outside China, most (communities) fall in that 3-to-5 gram per day range,” Mente said. “In that moderate range, we find no relationship between sodium and any clinical outcome or mortality.”


“Certainly, we need to target communities like in China who are at very high levels of sodium (but in ) most other parts of the world, most of whom are already at moderate levels, lowering their sodium further (would not benefit them) and in fact may even result in harm,” Mente said.


It’s better to focus on improving diet quality rather than focusing on a single nutrient like sodium, he noted.


The study team did find that in all countries, the risk of cardiovascular events decreased as potassium intake increased.


Potassium-rich foods include fruits and vegetables, nuts and seeds, potatoes and dairy products, Mente said.


“(It’s a) solid study, well done, showing still that BP and stroke increase with salt intake, but heart attack and mortality do not,” Dr Franz Messerli, a cardiologist with University Hospital in Bern, Switzerland, and coauthor of an accompanying editorial told Reuters Health in an email.


There doesn’t seem to be any reason for people with normal blood pressure to restrict salt intake, Messerli said.


“The current salt intake in the US population seems acceptable unless you have hypertension,” he said. — Reuters


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