Baltimore Sun

How much salt in one’s diet is too much?

Experts shake out what research says about health risks

- By Alice Callahan

Without sodium, you wouldn’t be able to survive. Nerves would fail to fire; muscles wouldn’t contract. But experts say that most people consume far too much of it, increasing their risk of high blood pressure and heart disease.

In the United States, for instance, about 95% of men and 77% of women consume more than 2,300 milligrams per day, a limit that federal health officials recommend.

But in recent decades, researcher­s have disagreed about how much sodium is too much, with some suggesting that federal guidelines are too strict. Those reports captured our attention and left many people confused, said Dr. Lawrence Appel, a professor of medicine at the

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.

But more recent research has clarified some of that murkiness, Appel said. We asked him and other experts to help set the record straight.

How does sodium affect health?

Scientific studies from the past 50 years or so have shown a clear pattern: “The more salt we eat, the higher our blood pressure goes,” said Cheryl Anderson, a professor of public health at the University of California, San Diego.

In a 2021 review of 85 clinical trials, for example, scientists looked at what happened to people’s blood pressure when they consumed 400 to 7,600 milligrams of sodium per day. As their consumptio­n increased, the researcher­s reported, so did their blood pressure. The effect was strongest for people

who already had high blood pressure, but the researcher­s also saw it in people who didn’t.

Managing your blood pressure is one of the most important things you can do to reduce your risk of developing heart disease or having a stroke, Anderson said. Nearly half of adults in the United States have high blood pressure. And researcher­s say that of all of the problems with our diets, sodium is the most harmful to global health: Excessive salt consumptio­n causes close to 2 million deaths each year, they estimate, mainly from cardiovasc­ular disease.

How much is too much?

According to the U.S. dietary guidelines, adults should have no more than 2,300 milligrams — equivalent to about 1 teaspoon of table salt — per day. The World Health Organizati­on and Internatio­nal Society of Hypertensi­on have a slightly lower limit at no more than 2,000 milligrams per day. And the American Heart Associatio­n says that while no more than 2,300 milligrams per day is a good target to aim for, it’s even better to avoid going over 1,500 milligrams per day, especially if you already have high blood pressure.

These guidelines are based on the best available evidence concerning high blood pressure and heart disease, said Dr. Frank Hu, a professor of nutrition and epidemiolo­gy at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.

But not all experts agree. In several studies published in the past decade or so, for instance, researcher­s reported that it was only people who consumed much more sodium — on the order of 5,000 milligrams per day — who had a greater risk of heart disease or earlier death. Those findings suggested that the sodium guidelines set by health organizati­ons across the world were too strict, said Dr. Martin O’Donnell, a professor of neurovascu­lar medicine at the University of Galway in Ireland.

This perspectiv­e garnered a lot of mainstream attention, Appel said. But other researcher­s found serious flaws with the contradict­ory studies; the issue that they could not accurately measure how much sodium people consumed, he added.

The sodium debate illustrate­s many of the challenges of nutrition research, Appel said. Large nutrition trials are much harder to conduct than large drug trials, he said, especially when looking at long-term health risks like heart attacks and strokes. Instead, nutrition researcher­s often rely on study designs that can show associatio­ns only between certain eating patterns and health, and conflictin­g results are common.

But the evidence to support reducing sodium consumptio­n to the recommende­d levels is “pretty darn strong,” Appel said.

So, do I need to cut back?

If you have high blood pressure, reducing your sodium consumptio­n will most likely help lower it, said Dr. Deepak K. Gupta, a cardiologi­st at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville, Tennessee. This has been shown in many studies, including a 2023 trial led by Gupta, which suggested that, in most people, low-sodium diets reduced blood pressure about as well as a medication did.

But you shouldn’t wait until you have high blood pressure to think about sodium, said Alta Schutte, a professor of cardiovasc­ular medicine at the George Institute for Global Health in Australia. Excess sodium throughout life can gradually damage blood vessels and eventually lead to high blood pressure. “It’s a cumulative effect,” she said.

Several recent trials have shown that adults with normal blood pressure who cut back on sodium were less likely to develop high blood pressure than those who didn’t reduce their consumptio­n.

“Prevention is certainly much better than treatment,” Hu said.

At the same time, these and other studies have shown that getting enough potassium may be just as important as cutting back on sodium, Schutte said. Getting adequate potassium from your diet can reduce your risk of high blood pressure and heart disease, in part because potassium helps your kidneys remove extra sodium from your blood.

But some people should avoid consuming too much potassium. If you have kidney disease or are taking certain medication­s like potassium-sparing diuretics, check with your doctor before increasing your consumptio­n, Schutte said. And those who are prone to low levels of sodium in their blood may not want to adopt a low-sodium diet, she added.

How will I know?

The average U.S. adult consumes about 3,500 milligrams of sodium per day. And it can be challengin­g to cut back to 2,300 milligrams without making drastic dietary changes.

It’s also difficult to know if you’re over the limit in the first place, since no simple test can measure this. But it’s not all or nothing, Hu said. Any reduction in sodium should be helpful for most people.

 ?? ?? TYLER COMRIE/
THE NEW YORK TIMES
TYLER COMRIE/ THE NEW YORK TIMES

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