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Kristin Wartman

Kristin Wartman

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Change in Season: Why Salt Doesn't Deserve Its Bad Rap

Posted: 05/31/11 11:12 AM ET

For something that's so often mixed with anti-caking agents, salt takes a lot of lumps in the American imagination. Like fat, people tend to think of it as an unnecessary additive -- something to be avoided by seeking out processed foods that are "free" of it. But also like fat, salt is an essential component of the human diet -- one that has been transformed into unhealthy forms by the food industry.

Historically, though, salt was prized. Its reputation can be found in phrases like, "Worth one's salt," meaning, "Worth one's pay," since people were often paid in salt and the word itself is derived from the Latin salarium, or salary.

Those days are long over. Doctors and dietitians, along with the USDA dietary guidelines, recommend eating a diet low in sodium to prevent high blood pressure, risk of cardiovascular disease, and stroke; and doctors have been putting their patients on low-salt diets since the 1970s. But a new study, published in the May 4 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), found that low-salt diets actually increase the risk of death from heart attack and stroke -- and in fact don't prevent high blood pressure.

The study's findings inspired much criticism and controversy -- as research that challenges conventional dietary wisdom often does. When the New York Times briefly reported on it, even the title conveyed the controversy: "Low-Sat Diet Ineffective, Study Finds. Disagreement Abounds." The Times reports that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention "felt so strongly that the study was flawed that they criticized it in an interview, something they normally do not do." According to the Times, Peter Briss, a medical director at the Centers, said that the study was small, that its subjects were young, and that they had few cardiovascular events -- making it hard to draw conclusions.

But most of all, Briss and others criticized the study because it challenges dietary dogma on sodium intake. These experts claim that a body of evidence establishes sodium consumption as a serious driver of cardiovascular disease. But if you take a careful look at the evidence, you'll see that the case against sodium crumbles under the weight of its contradictions. Gary Taubes wrote about the controversy on the benefits of salt reduction more than 10 years ago in a piece for Science called "The (Political) Science of Salt." He portrayed a clash between the desire for immediate and simple answers and the requirements of good science. "This is the conflict that fuels many of today's public health controversies," Taubes asserted.

The JAMA study published early this month is not the first to find that a low-salt diet may be detrimental. In 2006, data from the NHANES II study showed that death from heart disease and all causes rose with lower salt consumption. Published in the American Journal of Medicine, the report found that:

Lower sodium has been associated with stimulation of the sympathetic nervous system, that, in turn, has been associated with adverse [cardiovascular disease] and mortality outcomes. Sodium restriction may also influence insulin resistance.

The insulin resistance association is compelling since so many Americans are exhibiting signs of insulin resistance, the precursor to diabetes. Dr. Michael Alderman, a blood pressure researcher at Albert Einstein College of Medicine and editor of the American Journal of Hypertension, said in an email, "The problem with reducing sodium enough to change blood pressure [is that it] has other effects -- including increasing insulin resistance, increasing sympathetic nerve activity, and activating the renin-angiotensin system and increasing aldosterone secretion. All bad things for the cardiovascular system."

There are those who will argue that any study claiming that sodium is not as harmful as previously believed are connected to the salt lobby, but this is untrue. The most recent JAMA study has no such connection and many real-food advocates, myself included, believe that salt is an essential part of a healthy diet. Alderman was once an unpaid consultant for the Salt Institute but no longer is, according to the Times article.

There is also a strange psychological component to this debate as is often seen in the nutrition world: When a message has been hammered in and repeated millions of times over the course of decades, whether or not that message is actually true becomes irrelevant -- and the people invested in presenting that message, whether for monetary gain or not, are especially resistant to any evidence that might be contrary. When asked about this phenomenon and the standard recommendations on salt, Alderman said, "They are based upon the hope that the blood pressure effect of lowering sodium would translate into a benefit in health. Opposition to these findings -- which only adds to a substantial body of similar information -- is that these folks have long held the faith that lowering sodium was a good idea. They have opposed randomized trials with the bogus argument that a randomized controlled trial would be too tough and expensive. Not so. They choose faith over science, but it's not a theological issue."

Witness the low-fat campaign that has raged on for decades despite research that now shows the low-fat campaign was actually based on little scientific evidence. When it comes to the fat debate, the crucial issue is determining which fats are healthy and which fats are not: Real, whole-food sources of fats, like butter and eggs, are healthy while industrially produced sources of fats, like partially hydrogenated oils or trans-fats, are not. Real fats and industrial fats cannot be lumped into the same category, and when they are, as is often the case in scientific research, the results are muddled. This was the case with studies on coconut oil, which used partially hydrogenated versions to determine that coconut oil was unhealthy, tarnishing its reputation as one of the worst fats. Meanwhile, recent research using unprocessed coconut oil shows that it is actually a healthy fat with a host of health benefits.

As for salt, the same logic can be applied. There are no studies based on a diet that draws its sodium from unrefined salt and from foods containing naturally occurring salt (like zucchini, celery, seaweed, oysters, shrimp, beets, spinach, fish, olives, eggs, red meat, and garbanzo beans). Clearer answers would surely emerge with a study like this.

The differences between refined and unrefined salt are significant. (Make sure you use unrefined sea salt, as other sea salts can be just as processed as ordinary table salt.) Unrefined sea salt contains about 82 percent sodium chloride and the rest is comprised of essential minerals including magnesium and calcium; and trace elements, like iodine, potassium, and selenium. Not coincidentally, they help with maintaining fluid balance and replenishing electrolytes.

Refined, processed salt is actually an industrial leftover, according to Nina Planck's book Real Food. Planck describes how the chemical industry removes the valuable trace elements found in salt and heats it 1,200 degrees F. What's left is 100 percent sodium chloride, plus industrial additives including aluminum, anticaking agents, and dextrose, which stains the salt purple. To gain its pure-white sheen, the salt is then bleached. Thus refined salt is hardly a whole food; and consuming a jolt of sodium chloride upsets fluid balance and dehydrates cells, to say nothing of the harm the various additives and bleach residues may cause.

But what's fascinating about this recent study is that even in monitoring those on a largely industrial foods diet, consuming what's considered high levels of salt, the results indicate that even this is better than a low-sodium diet.

Why might this be? Sodium is one of the two major electrolytes our bodies need to function properly, and like any other element, nutrient, vitamin, or mineral we put into our bodies, it does not exist or function in isolation. Sodium is important for maintaining blood volume, it works in concert with potassium, which is needed for vasodilatation or constriction, and it also interacts with calcium, which is needed for vascular smooth muscle tone. Sodium exists in all of the fluids in our body and is essential to water balance regulation, nerve stimulation, and proper function of the adrenal glands. It is also crucial to maintaining mental acuity -- sodium is required to activate glial cells in the brain -- these cells make up 90 percent of the brain and are what makes us think faster and make connections. This is part of the reason sodium deficiency (sunstroke, heat exhaustion) leads to confusion and lethargy as the human brain is extremely sensitive to changing sodium levels in the body.

Like fat, salt was prized by traditional cultures. Those groups that were landlocked often burned sodium-rich marsh grasses and added the ash to their foods to acquire healthy amounts of salt and they traded with peoples living near the ocean for fish and salt. The tendency of scientific studies to isolate parts of our foods and determine whether or not they are good or bad obfuscates a clear picture of the larger processes involved in eating and metabolizing in the human body. It also complicates something that shouldn't be complicated: eating real, whole foods as they exist in nature. Isolating and demonizing certain aspects of real, whole foods -- like fat and salt -- only confuses the public.

This post originally appeared on Grist

 

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
drvittoriarepetto
7 minutes ago (9:03 PM)
A little unrefined sea salt is a good thing; case in point:

Frequently in the summer months, I’ll have patients complain about fatigue and dizziness and after some questions about sweating, exercise, and their cooking practices, I usually discover that they didn’t use any salt in their cooking. They are the exact opposite of people who not only use salt for cooking but then add salt to their food when it’s on the plate. So balance is the key here, hot weather, sweating a great deal are good reasons to add a little more salt.

http://drv­ittoriarep­etto.wordp­ress.com/2­010/03/31/­to-salt-or­-not-to-sa­lt-that-is­-the-quest­ion/
3 hours ago (5:49 PM)
Sorry about the graphic error. I mean the renin-angi­­otensin-a­­ldosteron­e system.
Carlos Monteiro,
http://www­.acidityth­eory.blogs­pot.com
4 hours ago (4:45 PM)
Graham MacGregor commenting the study by Heartwire have demonstrat­ed irritation regarding the remarks on the sympatheti­c acitvity as a possible underlying mechanism. However, Dr. MacGregor also have overreacte­d in 2003 with the findings by Grassi and colleagues about the effects of modest salt reduction on sympatheti­c activity. Indeed, investigat­ors in some short term trials have observed activation of the renin-angi­ogenesis-a­ldosterone system and the sympatheti­c nervous system, a decrease in insulin sensitivit­y and increases in LDL cholestero­l concentrat­ions, triglyceri­des and uric acid. On the other side, because plasma norepineph­rine levels during high salt intake remain unaltered in salt-sensi­tive hypertensi­ve patients but are reduced in normal subjects and non-salt-s­ensitive hypertensi­ve patients, abnormal relationsh­ips between salt intake and sympatheti­c activity have been suggested. Arterial barorecept­or reflex function is known to occur in salt-sensi­tive animal models of hypertensi­on and also in patients with hypertensi­on. It it is interestin­g to note that a high sodium diet may depress arterial barorecept­or reflex in normotensi­ve people, with sympatheti­c activation­. Taking the above arguments in the view of the acidity theory of atheroscle­rosis that sympatheti­c predominan­ce may lead to cardiovasc­ular disease, both exaggerate­d restrictio­n as well high intake of dietary sodium may be deleteriou­s to human health. So, I’m not sure if indiscrimi­nate restrictio­n at population level of salt is the better way. My take is that salt balance should be thought according individual requiremen­ts. Carlos Monteiro, http://www­.acidityth­eory.blogs­pot.com
8 hours ago (1:20 PM)
I work as a chef and am often in a hot kitchen. As a result I had to step up my sodium intake as it was low. Low sodium is an incredibly dangerous condition. Get your blood sodium checked and then you will know if adjustment­s are needed.
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pdxist
Feel free to copy my avatar! (Or ask me how.)
8 hours ago (12:56 PM)
All you have to do is click on the links to read the study's flaws that this article omits, like the fact that the people who had the lowest-sod­ium diets also had the lowest reporting, suggesting they simply weren't collecting all of their urine like the others:

http://www­.nytimes.c­om/2011/05­/04/health­/research/­04salt.htm­l

Also, the study doesn't do a thing to contradict the clear connection between reduced sodium intake and reduced heart disease. It's only attempting to challenge heart disease PREVENTION­, not reducing existing heart disease, which reduced sodium intake clearly does.
02:05 PM on 5/31/2011
Anyone who has taken a high school introducti­on to biology class should understand that sodium and potassium work in tandem and that it makes little sense to talk about one without talking about the other. Why medical doctors with advanced degrees cannot understand this is beyond me. Sodium raises blood pressure, and potassium lowers blood pressure. The average American consumes less than half the daily recommende­d intake of potassium and is technicall­y considered potassium-­deficient. This is a big part of why we have epidemic rates of hypertensi­on.
jf12
I am gray and italic
01:32 PM on 5/31/2011
The few times I've totally veganned out for weeks or months on end, I wind up eating bags of potato chips. Grease and salt for breakfast, salt and grease for lunch, greasy salt suppers. That's actually the only reason I quit being vegetarian­.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ghostberry
01:08 PM on 5/31/2011
I'd challenge you to find even a handful of people that keep their intake below the daily guidelines in one meal let alone in one day. If you have ever gone on a low sodium regimen you can feel the difference­.
12:35 PM on 5/31/2011
I absolutely buy into this thinking. Eat real foods and salt to taste.