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Slow Poison! Higher salt intake may be dangerous to your life

The study suggested that an inaccurate way of estimating sodium intake may help account for the paradoxical findings of others.

India TV Lifestyle Desk Edited by: India TV Lifestyle Desk New Delhi Published on: June 24, 2018 15:08 IST
Higher intake of salt is dangerous

Higher intake of salt is dangerous

A study published in International Journal of Epidemiology has found that higher salt intake through food can kill. 

The study suggested that an inaccurate way of estimating sodium intake may help account for the paradoxical findings of others. Nancy Cook, a researcher in this topic said that Sodium is notoriously hard to measure.

"Sodium is hidden -you often don't know how much of it you're eating, which makes it hard to estimate how much a person has consumed from a dietary questionnaire. Sodium excretions are the best measure, but there are many ways of collecting those. In our work, we used multiple measures to get a more accurate picture," she added. Sodium intake can be measured using a spot test to determine how much salt has been excreted in a person's urine sample.

However, sodium levels in urine can fluctuate throughout the day so an accurate measure of a person's sodium intake on a given day requires a full 24-hour sample. In addition, sodium consumption may change every day, as the best way to get a full picture of sodium intake is to take samples on multiple days. While previous studies have used spot samples and the Kawasaki formula, the team assessed sodium intake in multiple ways, including estimates based on that formula as well as ones based on the gold-standard method, which uses the average of multiple, non-consecutive urine samples.

The researchers assessed results for participants in the Trials of Hypertension Prevention, which included nearly 3,000 individuals with pre-hypertension. The method showed a direct linear relationship between increased sodium intake and increased risk of death. The team found that the Kawasaki formula suggested a J-shaped curve, which would imply that both low levels and high levels of sodium consumption were associated with increased mortality.

(With ANI inputs)

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