More documented risks of low-salt diets
"(E)xcessive salt restriction is as harmful as high salt in heart failure," concludes a study in the European Journal of Pharmacology . The Osaka, Japan-based research team demonstrated that for heart failure patients low-salt diets activate plasma aldosterone and the "increased plasma aldosterone level with strict salt restriction activated the mineralocorticoid receptor signaling in volume-overloaded condition, resulting in increased myocardial fibrosis."
In short, yet another study showing the risk of low-salt diets. The authors conclude:
A recent report showed that high sodium intake rather improved cardiac performance, induced peripheral vasodilatation, and suppressed the release of vasoconstrictor hormones in patients with compensated heart failure (Damgaard et al., 2006). Indeed, our findings suggest that salt depletion, which increases the plasma aldosterone level, must be avoided in addition to salt overload in the treatment of heart failure.
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