According to a study scheduled for
presentation at the American College of Cardiology's 66th Annual
Scientific Session, researcher say that despite recommendations to
limit sodium intake to support a heart-healthy lifestyle, daily
sodium intake significantly increased in Americans with high blood
pressure from 1999-2012.
The study found people with high blood
pressure consumed an average of 2,900 milligrams of sodium per day in
1999 and 3,350 milligrams per day in 2012, for an overall average
daily sodium intake of 3,100 milligrams during the 14-year study
period. That's more than twice the 1,500 milligram daily maximum
recommended for people with high blood pressure in dietary guidelines
issued by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and U.S.
Department of Agriculture since 2005.
The increase appears to be driven by
rising sodium intake among Hispanics and African-Americans, groups
that historically showed lower sodium intake levels compared to
whites but whose sodium consumption matched that of whites by the end
of the study period. Groups with the lowest sodium intake included
those with more advanced forms of heart disease such as a history of
heart attack or stroke.
The researchers analyzed data from the
National Health and Nutrition. Excess sodium consumption increases
the risk of heart disease because it draws additional water into the
bloodstream, raising the volume, and consequently, the pressure, of
the blood as it flows through blood vessels. This increased blood
pressure creates strain on the heart and cardiovascular system.
Elena Dolmatova, MD, a resident at
Rutgers New Jersey Medical School and the study's lead author states,
"We need to find a way to address this so that the message
actually gets to people. People shouldn't wait until they have a
heart attack before taking action to limit sodium."
Dolmatova and her colleagues extracted
the records of 13,000 people participating in the survey between
1999-2012 who indicated they had been diagnosed with high blood
pressure. People in the sample were an average age of 60 and slightly
more than half were men.
The team then analyzed the sodium
intake of these 13,000 study participants based on questionnaires
that provided a snapshot of their daily food intake. The analysis
revealed that daily sodium intake increased among people with high
blood pressure by more than 14 percent overall from 1999-2012. Intake
increased by 26 percent and 20 percent among Hispanic and
African-American participants, respectively, compared to 2 percent in
white Americans. White participants had the highest overall sodium
intake across the study period and a markedly higher intake than
other racial groups at the start of the study, but showed little
change in sodium intake over time. All racial groups reported roughly
the same daily sodium intake by 2012.
In general, men reported higher sodium
intake than women, although both men and women increased their sodium
intake over the course of the study at roughly the same rate.
Relative to all people with high blood
pressure, those with the lowest sodium intake were people who had
experienced a heart attack or stroke, were taking blood pressure
medications, or who had diabetes, obesity or heart failure.
Although these findings suggest people
with worse health conditions are likely more motivated to take
dietary recommendations seriously, the researchers emphasized that
reducing sodium intake is important for anyone with high blood
pressure.
"For many diseases, lifestyle
modification is the first and most effective step in treatment,"
Dolmatova said. "There are [many] medications for hypertension,
but they all come at a cost and have side effects; we [the medical
community] have to focus more effort on educating people to
successfully implement these lifestyle modifications and thus
decrease the use of medications."
U.S. dietary guidelines recommend a
daily maximum of 1,500 milligrams of sodium for people with high
blood pressure or a high risk of developing it, and a daily maximum
of 2,300 milligrams (the amount in one teaspoon of table salt) for
most other people. Since the majority of the typical American's daily
sodium intake comes from prepared or processed foods, experts
recommend cutting down on processed foods or switching to low-sodium
or sodium-free products to reduce sodium intake. Other
recommendations include selecting less salty items at restaurants,
using less salt when cooking at home and tasting food before adding
salt at the table.
One limitation of this retrospective
study is that it relied on self-reporting by participants to measure
both high blood pressure and dietary intake. In addition, because
authors analyzed the data during the 12-year period from 1999 to
2012, the study does not reflect any dietary changes that might have
occurred since the latest U.S. dietary guidelines were released in
2016.
Dolmatova will present the study,
"Dietary Sodium Intake among United States Adults with
Hypertension, 1999-2012," on Sunday, March 19, at 12:30 p.m. ET
at the Prevention Moderated Poster Theater, Poster Hall C at the
American College of Cardiology's 66th Annual Scientific Session in
Washington. The meeting runs March 17-19.
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