More scientists doubt salt is as bad for you as the
government says
For
years, the federal government has advised Americans that they are eating too
much salt, and that this excess contributes yearly to the deaths of tens of
thousands of people.
But unknown to many shoppers urged
to buy foods that are “low sodium” and “low salt,” this longstanding warning
has come under assault by scientists who say that typical American salt
consumption is without risk.
Moreover, according to studies
published in recent years by pillars of the medical community, the low levels
of salt recommended by the government might actually be dangerous.
“There is no longer any valid basis
for the current salt guidelines,” said Andrew Mente, a professor at McMaster
University in Ontario and one of the researchers involved in a major study
published last year by the New England Journal of Medicine. “So why are we
still scaring people about salt?”
But the debate over dietary
salt is among the most contentious in the field of nutrition, and other
scientists, including the leadership of the American Heart Association,
continue to support the decades-old warning.
The result is that as the federal
government prepares its influential Dietary Guidelines for 2015, bureaucrats
confront a quandary: They must either retract one of their oldest dietary
commandments - or overlook these prominent new doubts.
The U.S. Dietary Guidelines cover an
array of nutritional issues including cholesterol,
fat and sugars. They have broad effects on American menus, shaping school
lunches, guiding advertisers, and serve as a touchstone for reams of diet
advice.
Dennis Bier, a professor at Baylor
College of Medicine said that as the editor of the American Journal of
Clinical Nutrition, he has been trying to stay neutral in what he considers the
“hot buttonest” of topics.
“When you are making recommendations
for 300 million people, you have to be concerned about any data that suggests
harm,” Bier said.
A spokesperson for the Department of
Health and Human Services said that the federal guidelines will consider
comments from the public and the advice of its science panel. Known as the
Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee, that panel in February generally
reaffirmed the current salt warning.
No matter what the government comes
up with on salt, however, Americans may be left confused.
The scientific question: How much is
too much?
There is one area of consensus: Both
sides agree that eating too much salt, especially for people with high blood
pressure, can be dangerous.
The critical disagreement concerns
how to define “too much.”
Under the current dietary
guidelines, too much is more than 2,300 milligrams of sodium per day - the
amount of sodium in a teaspoon of salt. (For people over 50, and for
African-Americans, the current recommended intake is even lower - 1,500
milligrams per day.)
If the U.S. salt warnings are
correct, Americans are indeed endangering themselves on a massive scale.
Americans typically go way over the limit, ingesting about 3,500 milligrams per
day.
If the skeptics are correct, on the
other hand, most Americans are fine. In their view, a typical healthy person
can consume as much as 6,000 milligrams per day without significantly raising
health risks. But consuming too little - somewhere below 3,000 milligrams
- also raises health risks, they say.
To understand how divided scientists
are on salt, consider that even authorities with the American Heart
Association, one of the organizations promoting the current salt limits, don’t
agree.
“The totality of the evidence
strongly suggests that Americans should be lowering their sodium intake,” said
Elliott Antman, the president of the American Heart Association. “Everyone
agrees that current sodium intake is too high.”
This is the long-established view. It
is based on the observation that, in some people, reducing salt consumption can
lower blood pressure. Because high blood pressure is common and raises the risk
of cardiovascular troubles, strict salt limits will benefit society, according
to this view.
None of this is persuasive to people
like Suzanne Oparil, a former president of the American Heart Association.
For one thing, the blood-pressure
reductions that come from abstaining from salt are relatively small on average,
because individuals vary widely in their reactions. (An average person who
reduces his or her salt intake from median levels to the U.S. recommended
levels may see a drop in blood pressure from 120/80 to 118/79, according to
American Heart Association figures.)
“The current [salt] guidelines are
based on almost nothing,” said Oparil, a distinguished professor of
medicine at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. “Some people really want
to hang onto this belief system on salt. But they are ignoring the evidence.”
How could something as simple as
salt stymie scientists for so long? The answer is that, despite the dietary
claims that are made for all kinds of foods, actually substantiating how
eating influences human health is notoriously difficult.
While the diets and lifestyles of
test animals are easily controlled, humans and their whims introduce an array
of murky variables, making people less-than-ideal subjects for what
scientists call randomized controlled trials, their preferred form of research.
This is especially true when these experiments go on for years, as diet
research often does.
In the absence of such experiments,
scientists are forced to consider lesser types of evidence. And in recent
years, the debate appears to have tilted in the skeptics' favor.
In 2013, the Institute of Medicine
published a major review of the evidence connecting salt consumption and health
outcomes. There was insufficient proof, the panel concluded, that heeding the
U.S. recommended limit on sodium consumption improved health outcomes.
Then, this past August,
the New England Journal of Medicine published the results of a massive research
effort known as the PURE study. It indicated that people who conform to the
U.S. recommended limits actually have more heart trouble.
To explain their findings, these
researchers pointed to studies suggesting that low sodium may stimulate
the production of renin, a hormone that may have harmful effects on blood
vessels.
While food studies are often
financed by the industry, the PURE study in the New England Journal of Medicine
and the Institute of Medicine study were funded by governmental and other
sources.
Remote tribes, politics and science
Since their inception more
than 30 years ago, the salt guidelines have drawn criticism.
Some of the earliest notions that
Americans were eating too much salt arose from international comparisons.
It turned out that in some cultures,
especially isolated ones, people consumed less salt and had lower blood
pressure.
In one influential 1973 paper,
University of Michigan anthropologist Lillian Gleiberman collected statistics
for 27 different populations. It showed the lowest blood pressures were
among African Bushmen, the Chimbu of New Guinea, the Caraja of Brazil
and Eskimos. Each consumed exceptionally low levels of salt.
Maybe, Gleiberman suggested, human
bodies had not adapted to the higher salt available in modern societies.
“My major hypothesis was that people
ate much less salt in prehistoric times,” Gleiberman, now retired, said by
phone recently. “And that our bodies may not be prepared for the larger amounts
of salt now available to us.”
But she said her paper was
intended to inspire more research, not to serve as the basis of dietary
guidelines. Those remote peoples, she said, are too different from modern
populations to make sound comparisons.
“They have a simpler life,”
Gleiberman said. “They don’t have the obesity, the diabetes and the other
problems we have. We can’t look at a no-salt culture and say, 'If we just do
that, we’d be okay.'
“I have friends who won’t eat
anything with salt,” she said. “I tell them they’re foolish.”
Nevertheless, when a Senate
committee led by Sen. George McGovern (D-S.D.) in 1977 set out to issue
national dietary goals, the international comparisons played a key role.
There was not much else to go on.
Scientists told the committee there was general agreement that very high salt
consumption could be harmful. But were Americans eating too much? That was a
matter of dispute.
“There is no doubt that excess salt,
gross excesses, can produce high blood pressure in specific populations,”
Robert I. Levy, director of the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute
testified to the committee, according to a transcript. “The problem is
demonstrating the efficacy of salt lowering in the American free-living
population.”
In formulating their salt
recommendations, the committee looked to the work of George R. Meneely and
Harold D. Battarbee, researchers at Louisiana State University who made two
arguments for restricting salt.
First, they said that our ancestors,
“a primal herbivorous people,” probably consumed no more than 600
milligrams of salt per day - far less than today - and that our bodies have yet
to adjust to the amount of salt available in modern society.
Second, they noted that, in some
people, lowering salt consumption lowered blood pressure. Since about 20
percent of American adults at the time had high blood pressure, reducing salt
consumption would “result in the amelioration of much suffering.”
But even Meneely and Battarbee noted
the complexity of the issue, noting that it was difficult to to say just how
poisonous salt is, or, as they put it, to “document its toxicity.”
Despite the uncertainty, the
committee advised Americans in “Dietary Goals” to reduce their salt consumption
to a very, very low level - 1,200 milligrams of sodium per day. That is
even lower than today’s most restrictive recommendations.
Wherever that figure came from, it
didn’t last long. By November, the committee issued another set of guidelines.
They raised the daily amount to 2,000 milligrams. But that didn’t last long,
either. Three years later, the federal bureaucracy - not the Senate committee -
issued its dietary advice. It was the first version of the “Dietary
Guidelines.” It advised people to lower their salt consumption, but it did not
specify an upper limit.
Intersalt, more doubts and the
revival of a salt limit
So the question lingered. The
Dietary Guidelines said Americans were eating too much salt. But how much was
“too much”?
In 1984, a major worldwide study
known as Intersalt was launched, with scientists testing more than 10,000
people from 52 different populations. The study was funded by the
U.S. government, a British charitable trust and other world groups.
Yet Intersalt, too, failed to
settle the argument. When the results were published in 1988, many of the
findings undercut the salt orthodoxy. In the comparisons of populations, there
was little proof that societies that consumed more salt suffered from higher blood
pressure. For example, while South Koreans consumed vast amounts of salt and
had low blood pressures, the opposite was true for a Belgian population.
One other item, however, did favor
salt restrictions: In places where more salt was consumed, blood pressures rose
more with age.
Both sides declared victory. Then,
despite the muddle, Intersalt became the basis for strict U.S. salt guidelines,
with the 1995 Dietary Guidelines recommending holding to just about today’s
limit of 2,300 milligrams per day.
(It takes some tracing back to see
that Intersalt is the basis of those guidelines, but the academic references
wind back as follows: The 1995 Dietary Guidelines cited an FDA report, which
cited a report called “Diet and Health” from the National Academy of Sciences,
which in turn cited the Intersalt findings. At each step, scientists had
declared their uncertainty.)
The strict salt limit had become a
fixture of U.S dietary advice.
The 2015 debate
Many experts expect that the 2015
Dietary Guidelines will stick to the existing 2,300 milligram limit.
Already, the 15-member
advisory panel in February recommended keeping the limit, though it
withdrew support for the even stricter 1,500 milligram limit for African
Americans and people over 50. It further called for measures to remove salt
from American foods.
Cheryl Anderson, a nutrition expert
at the University of California at San Diego who led the advisory panel’s
sodium working group, said the government should continue to offer salt
guidelines despite some of the recent findings that have called them into
question.
One of the major critical studies
was the PURE investigation, which incuded more than 100,000 people and was
published in the New England Journal of Medicine. Anderson said it was
“respectable” and “an important contribution.”
But she said such studies may be
misleading because researchers take only a limited number of urine samples.
And, she said, that type of research, known as observational studies, may
suffer from a problem known as “reverse causality.” That is, while the data
suggested that low-salt diets may have caused cardiovascular problems, maybe it
was just the reverse - that preexisting cardiovascular problems had led
people to eat low-salt diets.
The authors of the PURE study took
steps to minimize such bias, but at the end, Anderson said, the weight of
the evidence favored the old salt warning.
“We can’t take any one study in
isolation,” Anderson said. “We placed the new ones in the context of the body
of literature on sodium - and we put the strongest recommendations forward.”
Poster’s comments:
1) All things
in moderation is always a good idea.
2) Now if one
does a lot of strenuous work, usually indicated by white sweat imbedded
collars, then one probably needs more sodium (usually taken as salt). Examples
of strenuous work can be military recruit training, farming in the warm season,
or even doing sports events when it is hot outside.
3) Don’t
forget potassium, too.
4) Electrolyte
type drinks often have sodium and potassium in them, too.
5) Basic
water ingestion when exerting oneself is
key, too. For example, when running a marathon one should ingest a cup of water
or so every five miles, starting at mile five. Now you can adjust that for your
body, too. Usually a lot of the water splashes out, but hopefully one gets much
of that water, too.
6) If one
allows themselves to get dehydrated (often indicated by getting cramps), the
recovery time is usually in hours (often 3 to 4 hours). There is no “free
lunch” on this issue.
7) Humans need sodium and potassium to live.
8) The present government guidelines tend to be for a more sedentary lifestyle.
9) There was a time in human history when "salt" was worth its weight in gold.
7) Humans need sodium and potassium to live.
8) The present government guidelines tend to be for a more sedentary lifestyle.
9) There was a time in human history when "salt" was worth its weight in gold.
Peter Whoriskey is a staff writer
for The Washington Post handling investigations of financial and economic
topics.

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