As if you needed another
reason to put down the salt shaker
by Stephanie
Thurrott | July 10, 2019
We’ve known for a
long time that a high-salt diet is linked with high blood pressure, and high
blood pressure contributes to heart disease and stroke risk.
Now, there’s another
reason to step away from the salt. An article published in Nature Neuroscience reports a connection
between high salt intake and problems with memory and learning. It’s not
triggered by high blood pressure, but by a link between the gut and the brain.
The study’s
researchers fed mice a high-salt diet. And it wasn’t one of those
thousand-times-above-normal-levels studies.
Costantino Iadecola,
M.D., one of the study’s investigators and the director and chair of the Feil Family
Brain and Mind Research Institute at Weill Cornell Medicine in New
York, N.Y, points out that the salt levels studied were high, but they were
comparable to levels sometimes seen in human diets.
The researchers found
that, over time, these high-salt-eating mice performed more poorly on cognitive
tests than mice on a normal-salt diet.
A new gut-brain
connection
In investigating what
was behind these results, the researchers discovered a new connection between
the gut—specifically, the small intestine—and the brain.
The high levels of
salt triggered immune changes in the gut. Those immune changes led to less
blood flow to the brain. That, in turn, led to the cognitive declines.
Prepare food at home and you’re in
control of the salt intake.
For those of us of a
certain age, there’s more bad news: Salt’s brain-busting effects started
sooner, and were worse, in middle-aged mice compared to younger mice.
The good news? Once
the mice stopped eating all the extra salt, their brain function returned to
normal.
You know the drill
While more research
is needed to confirm whether these results hold true for people, reducing salt
intake probably isn’t a bad idea.
The American Heart Association recommends 2,300 milligrams a day of
sodium or less. That’s about a teaspoon of salt. But Americans
average about 3,400 milligrams a day, or almost 50% more than what’s
recommended.
And, ideally, the AHA
would like to see most adults at 1,500 milligrams a day or less.
To reduce your salt
intake, cut back on processed and prepared foods—they’re responsible for more
than 70% of the salt Americans consume. Watch out for these top culprits,
according to the AHA:
·
Bread.
Bread might not taste salty, but a slice can pack up to 230 milligrams of
sodium.
·
Pizza.
Just one slice of pizza might have 760 milligrams of sodium. Ask for extra
veggies and light cheese to cut down on salt.
·
Canned
soup. With up to 940 milligrams of sodium per cup, you’re better off choosing
low-sodium options, and adding extra veggies to cut salt per serving even more.
·
Cold
cuts and cured meat, which have salt added as a preservative.
·
Poultry.
Processed nuggets can be high in salt, and even fresh chicken might be injected
with a salt solution.
·
Sandwiches,
burritos, and tacos. These go-to lunch options are often loaded with salt.
Prepare food at home,
and you’re in control of the salt. But that’s not always feasible, so when you
need to turn to processed or prepared foods, read the labels or ask for
nutritional information. That way you can make lower-salt choices.
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