High sodium diet may increase mortality risk: Study

Press Trust of India  |  Boston 

Consuming a diet high in may lead to heart diseases, and increase the risk of early death, a study warns.

The research, published in of Epidemiology, was carried on nearly 3,000 individuals with pre-hypertension or

It confirms a linear relationship between eating high in salt and mortality risk.

"is notoriously hard to measure. is hidden - you often don't know how much of it you are eating, which makes it hard to estimate how much a person has consumed from a dietary questionnaire," said from Brigham and in the US.

"Sodium excretions are the best measure, but there are many ways of collecting those. In our work, we used multiple measures to get a more accurate picture," said Cook.

Sodium levels in urine can fluctuate throughout the day so an accurate measure of a person's sodium intake on a given day requires a full 24-hour sample, researchers said.

In addition, sodium consumption may change from day to day, meaning that the best way to get a full picture of sodium intake is to take samples on multiple days, they said.

Differing in their approach from other scientists, the team assessed sodium intake in multiple ways.

The methods included estimates based on the formulae including the Kawasaki formula, used in previous studies, as well as ones based on the gold-standard method, which uses the average of multiple, non-consecutive urine samples.

The researchers concluded that the gold-standard method showed a direct linear relationship between increased sodium intake and increased risk of death.

"Our findings indicate that inaccurate measurement of sodium intake could be an important contributor to the paradoxical J-shaped findings reported in some cohort studies," the researchers said.

"Epidemiological studies should not associate outcomes with unreliable estimates of sodium intake," they said.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, July 02 2018. 16:15 IST