Feb. 25 - Lowering Soft Drink Consumption by Reducing Kids'
Salt Intake May Cut Obesity
Children who eat less salt drink fewer sugar-sweetened
soft drinks and may significantly lower their risks for obesity,
elevated blood pressure and later-in-life heart attack and stroke,
researchers reported in the print and online issue of Hypertension:
Journal of the American Heart Association.
Previous studies have shown that dietary salt
intake increases fluid consumption in adults. But researchers
at St. George's University of London, England, are the first
to examine whether the same is true in children.
"Sugar-sweetened soft drinks are a significant
source of calorie intake in children," said Feng J. He,
MD, lead author of the study. "It has been shown that sugar-sweetened
soft drink consumption is related to obesity in young people.
However, it is unclear whether there is a link between salt
intake and sugar-sweetened soft drink consumption."
Dr. He and colleagues analyzed data from the
National Diet and Nutrition Survey (NDNS) in Great Britain,
conducted in 1997 in a nationally representative sample of more
than 2,000 people between 4 and 18 years old. Among the participants,
more than 1,600 boys and girls had salt and fluid intake recorded
using a seven-day dietary record, with all food and drink consumed
weighed on digital scales.
"We found that children eating a lower-salt
diet drank less fluid," said Dr. He, a cardiovascular research
fellow at St. George's. "From our research, we estimated
that 1 gram of salt cut from their daily diet would reduce fluid
intake by 100 grams per day."
The researchers also found that children eating
a lower-salt diet drank fewer sugar-sweetened soft drinks. From
their research, they predicted that reducing salt intake by
1 gram each day would reduce sugar-sweetened soft drink consumption
by 27 grams per day, after considering other factors such as
age, gender, body weight and level of physical activity.
"If children aged 4 to 18 years cut their
salt intake by half (i.e., an average reduction of 3 grams a
day), there would be a decrease of approximately two sugar-sweetened
soft drinks per week per child, so each child would decrease
calorie intake by almost 250 kcal per week," Dr. He said.
"Not only would reducing salt intake lower blood pressure
in children, but it could also play a role in helping to reduce
obesity."
In previous studies, researchers found that
a modest reduction in dietary salt intake lowers blood pressure
in children, and a low-salt diet during childhood may prevent
the development of high blood pressure later in life.
The new research suggests that reduced salt
intake could also help decrease childhood obesity, through its
effect on sugar-sweetened soft drink consumption.
"Both high blood pressure and obesity increase
the risk of having strokes and heart attacks," Dr. He said.
"It is, therefore, important for children to eat a low-salt
diet to reduce their risk of having a stroke or a heart attack
later in life. All physicians should give their patients appropriate
advice on how to reduce salt in their diet."
Dr. He recommends that parents check labels,
choose low-salt food products and not add salt during cooking
and at the table. She also urges consumers to challenge the
food industry to make a gradual and sustained reduction in the
amount of salt added to children's food products that have added
salt.
In most developed countries, about 80% of salt
intake is from salt already added to food by the food industry.
Reducing salt would not necessarily impact food taste, she said.
"Small reductions in the salt content of
10% to 20% cannot be detected by the human salt taste receptors
and do not cause any technological or safety problems,"
Dr. He said.
Source: American Heart Association
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