Limiting sodium and increasing potassium may be
key to preventing chronic disease
Newswise, March 9, 2017--Reducing sodium (salt) in the diet
has been recommended to lower blood pressure and the risk of heart disease.
However, in a new review article, University of Southern California researchers
found that increasing dietary potassium is as important to improving the risk
factors for cardiovascular and kidney disease as limiting dietary sodium.
The article is
published ahead of print in the American Journal of
Physiology—Endocrinology and Metabolism.
The research team reviewed more than 70 studies related to
dietary approaches to regulating high blood pressure and found that the
interaction of sodium and potassium is integral to maintaining healthy blood
pressure levels.
The ratio of sodium to potassium excreted as urine is an
indication of how much of these minerals is consumed. When dietary potassium
intake is elevated, the kidneys—composed of millions of small tubes working
together—shift fluid to the area near the end of the tubes where potassium
secretes into the urine.
This shift reduces the amount of sodium and water
that’s reabsorbed into the body. In this way, high potassium diet signals the
body to reduce the amount of sodium that is retained.
This circular pattern
regulates the levels of both minerals in the body, which in turn helps lower
blood pressure. Higher intake and excretion of potassium has also been found to
slow the progression of kidney and heart disease.
In addition to analyzing data about the sodium-potassium ratio
and its relationship to chronic disease, the research team explored strategies
to educate the public about the importance of potassium for blood pressure
control and heart health. Suggested policies include:
• Requiring manufacturers to print potassium content on Nutrition Facts labels,
• Promoting low-cost and easily available sources of potassium (milk, dried beans, potatoes, bananas) and
• Encouraging families to cook healthy, plant-based meals together.
• Requiring manufacturers to print potassium content on Nutrition Facts labels,
• Promoting low-cost and easily available sources of potassium (milk, dried beans, potatoes, bananas) and
• Encouraging families to cook healthy, plant-based meals together.
“Consuming [an abundance] of [potassium] is a good strategy
since our physiology evolved and was optimized to deal with high [potassium]
low [sodium] intake, often referred to a Paleolithic diet,” wrote the research
team. In other words, the human body functions best with a balance of the two
nutrients.
Read the full article, “Cardiovascular
benefits associated with higher dietary K+ versus lower dietary Na+: Evidence
from population and mechanistic studies,” published ahead of print in
the American Journal of Physiology—Endocrinology and
Metabolism.
Physiology is the study of how molecules, cells,
tissues and organs function in health and disease. Established in 1887, the
American Physiological Society (APS) was the first U.S. society in the
biomedical sciences field. The Society represents more than 10,500 members and
publishes 15 peer-reviewed journals with a worldwide readership.
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