NEWS
RELEASE
For Immediate Release: February 6, 2004
Recommendations issued on behalf of The Canadian Hypertension
Society, The Canadian Coalition for High Blood Pressure Prevention and Control, The
College of Family Physicians of Canada, The Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada, and the
Chronic Disease Prevention Division, Centre for Chronic Disease Prevention and Control,
Health Canada, do not include restricting salt intake for a majority of Canadians.
Six
lifestyle recommendations to prevent hypertension (salt is number 5) include the
following:
· Patients
being treated for hypertension and normotensive
individuals at high risk for developing hypertension who are also considered
salt sensitive should limit sodium intake to 2,300 mg/day or less. The
high risk normotensive population is a subset of individuals with diastolic blood
pressures greater than 80 mm/Hg. Thus,
individuals with diastolic blood pressure below 80 mm/Hg, the majority of the population,
are excluded from any current need to restrict dietary salt. Also, individuals with diastolic blood pressure
80-89 mm/Hg who are not at high risk are also excluded from recommendations to restrict
salt.
·
Individuals
should perform 30 min to 45 min of aerobic exercise on most days (four to five days) of
the week
·
Individuals
should maintain an ideal body weight (body mass index 18.5 kg/m2
to 24.9 kg/m2)
and weight loss strategies should use a multidisciplinary approach
·
Individuals
should limit alcohol consumption to two drinks or fewer per day, and weekly intake should
not exceed 14 standard drinks for men and nine standard drinks for women
·
Individuals
should choose a reduced fat, low cholesterol diet that emphasizes fruits, vegetables and
low fat dairy products, and maintains an adequate intake of potassium, magnesium and
calcium.
·
Selected
individuals should consider stress management intervention.
The recommendations were published this week in the Canadian Journal of Cardiology (http://www.pulsus.com/CARDIOL/20_01/touy_ed.htm).
The
Canadian Hypertension Education Program warns that none of the lifestyle modifications
have yet been tested in health outcomes trials and that long-term follow-up studies
demonstrate that many patients fail to sustain lifestyle changes.
The
recommendations are based only on blood pressure changes and were derived using
pre-specified levels of evidence and included searches of the Cochrane Collaboration
databases, the global standards organization in evidence-based medical decision-making.
-
30
Media inquiries
can be directed to Dr. Alexander G. Logan, Mt. Sinai Hospital, Toronto, a co-author of the
recommendations. Dr. Logan can be reached at:
416/586-5187
or alogan@mtsinai.on.ca.
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
[About Salt Institute] [About salt] [About the salt industry] [News] [SI Member Business (password required] [E-Mail Salt Institute]