Yorkshire Post

Heart patients ‘live better but not longer’ if they reduce salt intake

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PEOPLE SUFFERING from heart failure who reduce their salt intake live better but not longer, scientists have found.

Going on a salt detox improves patients’ quality of life and symptoms, but does not save the day, according to a new study.

While people with weak hearts are commonly told by experts to lay off the salt, there has been little scientific evidence to back this up.

Now scientists at the University of Alberta in Canada have found that while cutting back on salt is good, it is by no means a silver bullet.

Lead author ProfessorJ­ustin Ezekowitz said: “We can no longer put a blanket recommenda­tion across all patients and say that limiting sodium intake is going to reduce your chances of either dying or being in hospital, but I can say comfortabl­y that it could improve people’s quality of life overall.”

The study involved 806 patients at 26 medical centres in Canada, the United States and Columbia, Chile, Mexico and New Zealand.

All were suffering from heart failure, a common condition whereby the heart becomes too weak to effectivel­y pump blood.

While half the participan­ts were assigned to receive “usual care”, the others were given advice on how to reduce their salt intake.

They were given menu suggestion­s with foods from their own region and encouraged to cook at home without salty ingredient­s.

Professor Ezekowitz said: “Most dietary sodium is hidden in processed foods or restaurant meals rather than being shaken at the table.

“The broad rule that I’ve learned from dieticians is that anything in a bag, a box or a can generally has more salt in it than you would think.”

Those who received advice on how to cut salt reduced their intake from on average 2,217 mg per day to 1,658 mg per day.

In comparison, participan­ts who had not been given any suggestion­s lowered theirs to 2,072 mg.

But there was no difference in how many people died or were admitted to hospital with heart problems.

The condition and quality of life of patients who had cut back on salt did however improve, the researcher­s found.

The researcher­s are now looking at ways of identifyin­g patients who would benefit most from a low-sodium diet.

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