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Jim Ritter
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MAYWOOD, Ill. (Jan 26, 2009) -- Most people know that too much sodium from foods can increase blood pressure.
A
new study suggests that people trying to lower their blood pressure
should also boost their intake of potassium, which has the opposite
effect to sodium.
Researchers found that the ratio of
sodium-to-potassium in subjects' urine was a much stronger predictor of
cardiovascular disease than sodium or potassium alone.
"There
isn't as much focus on potassium, but potassium seems to be effective
in lowering blood pressure and the combination of a higher intake of
potassium and lower consumption of sodium seems to be more effective
than either on its own in reducing the risk of cardiovascular disease,"
said Dr. Paul Whelton, senior author of the study in the January 2009
issue of the Archives of Internal Medicine. Whelton is an epidemiologist and president and CEO of Loyola University Health System.
Researchers
determined average sodium and potassium intake during two phases of a
study known as the Trials of Hypertension Prevention. They collected
24-hour urine samples intermittently during an 18-month period in one
trial and during a 36-month period in a second trial. The 2,974 study
participants initially aged 30-to-54 and with blood pressure readings
just under levels considered high, were followed for 10-15 years to see
if they would develop cardiovascular disease. Whelton was national
chair of the Trials of Hypertension Prevention.
Those with the
highest sodium levels in their urine were 20 percent more likely to
suffer strokes, heart attacks or other forms of cardiovascular disease
compared with their counterparts with the lowest sodium levels. However
this link was not strong enough to be considered statistically
significant.
By contrast, participants with the highest
sodium-to-potassium ratio in urine were 50 percent more likely to
experience cardiovascular disease than those with the lowest
sodium-to-potassium ratios. This link was statistically significant.
Most
previous studies of the relationship between sodium or potassium and
cardiovascular disease have had to rely on people's recall or record of
what foods they eat to estimate their level of sodium consumption. This
is a less precise measure of sodium intake than urine samples. In
addition, many have been cross-sectional rather than follow-up studies.
The new study "is a quantum leap in the quality of the data compared to what we have had before," Whelton said.
Whelton
was a member of a recent Institute of Medicine panel that set dietary
recommendations for salt and potassium. The panel said healthy 19-to-50
year-old adults should consume no more than 2,300 milligrams of sodium
per day -- equivalent to one teaspoon of table salt. More than 95
percent of American men and 75 percent of American women in this age
range exceed this amount.
To lower blood pressure and blunt
the effects of salt, adults should consume 4.7 grams of potassium per
day unless they have a clinical condition or medication need that is a
contraindication to increased potassium intake. Most American adults
aged 31-to-50 consume only about half as much as recommended in the
Institute of Medicine report. Changes in diet and physical activity
should be under the supervision of a health care professional.
Good
potassium sources include fruits, vegetables, dairy foods and fish.
Foods that are especially rich in potassium include potatoes and sweet
potatoes, fat-free milk and yogurt, tuna, lima beans, bananas, tomato
sauce and orange juice. Potassium also is available in supplements.
Source: Loyola University Health System
Original article: Jing Chen, Dongfeng Gu, Cashell E. Jaquish, Chung-Shiuan Chen, D. C. Rao, Depei Liu, James E. Hixson, L. Lee Hamm, C. Charles Gu, Paul K. Whelton. Association Between Blood Pressure Responses to the Cold Pressor Test and Dietary Sodium Intervention in a Chinese Population. Arch Intern Med. 2008;168(16):1740-1746.
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