Now if the American Heart Association
would believe this we could be on to something. I do expect to see
something from them and it will be a rebuttal if I am right. It
turns out they don't need to as the American Diabetes Association did
it for them in DiabetesPro SmartBrief. It carried an article by
Reuters of people with diabetes ignoring salt uptake warnings. Both
articles were dated September 8, 2014. The salt controversy just
won't go away.
Previously on August 26, 2014, Eric
Topol, editor of Medscape, used two studies and compares them. I
will quote this from his article, “Our crackerjack
cardiovascular news managing editor, Shelley Wood, published a superb
article on Medscape - the heart.org, with many of the parties and
leading experts weighing in. For me, the real coup de grâce was the
Wall Street Journal's editorial column, "The Salt Libel,"
which highlighted this conclusion: "[T]he illusion that science
can provide some objective answer that applies to everyone...is a
special danger."
I believe that adequately sums up
all there is to say about sodium, at least for now. The AHA,
however, isn't backing off from its 1.5 g/d sodium guideline. But I
think there's a big lesson here about guidelines without adequate
evidence: They can do harm. Hopefully this lesson will prove to be
impactful, because that certainly has not been the case to date (as
in cholesterol/LDL, BP, PSA, mammography, and a very long list of
poorly conceived, nonanchored guidelines).
Isn't it about time to recognize
that there shouldn't be rules for populations? Some people are
exquisitely sensitive to salt intake, while others are remarkably
resistant.”
New research should play a role in
determining public health initiatives for reducing epidemic
hypertension. It is unfortunate that hypertension is the world's
most prevalent chronic disease. I was even surprised that it was so
common at the younger ages. It affects more that 30 percent of
adults at age 25 and above. It accounts for 9.4 million deaths every
year.
With hypertension's increasing
prevalence and the difficulty the global health community has in
managing it, more should be done to identify casual behavioral
relationships to blood pressure outcome that can lead to better
strategies for preventing hypertension.
It is obvious that the salt debate will
continue until the different medical groups decide to find science
for their guidelines instead of what they call “expert opinion”
and consensus. The science is slowly building and showing that there
is more than just “expert opinion.”
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