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Circulation. 2007;116:1530-1531
doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.107.729574
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(Circulation. 2007;116:1530-1531.)
© 2007 American Heart Association, Inc.


Editorial

Eat Your Fruits and Vegetables But Hold the Salt

Paul R. Conlin, MD

From the Endocrinology Section, VA Boston Healthcare System, and Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes and Hypertension, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Mass.

Correspondence to Paul R. Conlin, MD, Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes and Hypertension, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, 221 Longwood Ave, Boston, MA 02115. E-mail pconlin@partners.org


Key Words: Editorials • blood pressure • diet • hypertension • sodium


An extract of the first 250 words of the full text is provided, because this article has no abstract.
 

Humans and animals like the taste of salt. It is 1 of 5 taste sensations present on the human tongue. We developed this sense because sodium and chloride are critical to our circulatory blood volume. Numerous redundant regulatory systems also evolved to protect and preserve blood volume through sodium conservation.

Article p 1563

So is too much of a good thing bad for us? During evolution, effective sodium conservation was favorable to survival when the environment was arid and food intake capricious. A surfeit of salt intake rarely occurred, until the modern era. Less evolutionary pressure existed to develop mechanisms to excrete excess salt. Thus, it became possible for too much salt intake to become detrimental.

Clinical investigators such as Lewis Dahl hypothesized and then became convinced through experimentation that excess salt intake is injurious to the cardiovascular system. But, although experimental animals can be bred to develop salt intake–related changes in blood pressure, humans are a much more complex entity. Scores of studies in humans have examined the blood pressure response to salt loading and deprivation. Almost all are short term (<30 days). From these studies, the terms salt sensitivity and salt resistance arose to describe the blood pressure response to changing dietary salt. But these terms often are arbitrarily defined and applied, and no clinical tool exists that can predict a given person’s blood pressure response to changes in salt intake.

National guidelines for the prevention and treatment of hypertension consistently advocate salt restriction for the general population1 . . . [Full Text of this Article]




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I. J Brown, I. Tzoulaki, V. Candeias, and P. Elliott
Salt intakes around the world: implications for public health
Int. J. Epidemiol., June 1, 2009; 38(3): 791 - 813.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]