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Cited 10 time in webofscience Cited 11 time in scopus
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Sodium Intake, Blood Pressure and Cardiovascular Diseaseopen access

Authors
Rhee, Moo-YongJeong, Yun-Jeong
Issue Date
Jul-2020
Publisher
KOREAN SOC CARDIOLOGY
Keywords
Sodium intake; Urine; Blood pressure; Cardiovascular
Citation
KOREAN CIRCULATION JOURNAL, v.50, no.7, pp 555 - 571
Pages
17
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
KCI
Journal Title
KOREAN CIRCULATION JOURNAL
Volume
50
Number
7
Start Page
555
End Page
571
URI
https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/6478
DOI
10.4070/kcj.2020.0042
ISSN
1738-5520
1738-5555
Abstract
Sodium intake reduction has been emphasized because sodium adversely impacts health, especially blood pressure (BP), and the cardiovascular (CV) disease risk. However, data obtained from several cohort studies have raised questions regarding the effects of high sodium intake on BP and the CV disease risk. In the present study, we systematically reviewed the literature to evaluate these associations. Studies showing negative associations between urine sodium and BP and CV outcomes relied on estimated 24-hour urine sodium from spot urine that is inappropriate for determining sodium intake at an individual level. Furthermore, controversy about the association between 24-hour urine sodium and BP may have been caused by different characteristics of study populations, such as age distribution, ethnicity, potassium intake and the inclusion of patients with hypertension, the different statistical methods and BP measurement methods. Regarding the association between sodium intake and the CV disease risk, studies showing negative or J- or U-shaped associations used a single baseline measurement of 24-hour urine sodium in their analyses. However, recent studies that employed average of subsequently measured 24-hour urine sodium showed positive, linear associations between sodium intake and CV outcomes, indicating that controversies are caused by the different sodium intake measurement methods and analytic designs. In conclusion, the study shows that positive associations exist between sodium intake and BP, CV outcomes, and mortality, and that the argument that reducing sodium intake is dangerous is invalid. Sodium intake reduction should be recommended to all, and not limited to patients with hypertension or CV disease.
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