Dietary sodium loading for 4 weeks did not increase pulse wave velocity compared to a low-sodium diet in normotensive volunteers (difference 0.01 m/s; 95% CI -0.38 to 0.40).
RCT (n=23)
Randomized crossover
Does dietary sodium loading increase pulse wave velocity or blood pressure in normotensive healthy volunteers?
Dietary sodium loading up to 140 mmol/day does not significantly increase pulse wave velocity or blood pressure in healthy normotensive individuals.
Estimación del efecto: Difference in PWV 0.01 m/s (95% CI -0.38, 0.40)
BACKGROUND: Studies of dietary sodium on vascular function and blood pressure in normotensive volunteers have shown conflicting results. There are very limited data available on the effect of chronic sodium loading from a low-sodium diet to a high-sodium diet on vascular function and blood pressure in normotensive volunteers. OBJECTIVE: To assess the effect of modifying dietary sodium intake on arterial function and surrogate markers of arterial remodelling in normal healthy volunteers. DESIGN: Twenty-three normotensive volunteers met the inclusion criteria. After a 2 week run-in with a low-sodium diet (60 mmol/day), the participants maintained their low-sodium diets and were randomly assigned to receive sequentially one of three interventions for 4 weeks, with a 2 week washout between interventions: sodium-free tomato juice (A), tomato juice containing 90 mmol Na (B) and tomato juice containing 140 mmol Na (C). The outcomes measured were changes in pulse wave velocity (PWV), systolic blood pressure and diastolic blood pressure. RESULTS: There was no difference in PWV between interventions (B-A 0.00 m/s, 95% CI: -0.30, 0.31 m/s; C-A 0.01 m/s, 95% CI: -0.38, 0.40 m/s). There was also no change in pulse wave analysis, systolic or diastolic blood pressure between interventions. There was an appropriate increase in urinary sodium excretion in the added sodium interventions. CONCLUSION: Dietary salt loading did not produce significant increases in PWV and blood pressure in normotensive subjects with systolic blood pressure <130 mmHg. The lack of an observed effect supports Guyton's pressure-natriuresis hypothesis with appropriate renal excretion of the excess sodium load.
Todd et al. (jue,) realizaron un ensayo controlado aleatorizado en voluntarios sanos normotensos (n=23). Se evaluó la carga de sodio dietético (jugo de tomate con sodio añadido) frente al jugo de tomate sin sodio sobre los cambios en la velocidad de onda de pulso (PWV), la presión arterial sistólica y la presión arterial diastólica (diferencia en PWV 0.01 m/s, IC del 95% -0.38, 0.40). La carga de sodio dietético durante 4 semanas no incrementó la velocidad de onda de pulso en comparación con una dieta baja en sodio en voluntarios normotensos (diferencia 0.01 m/s; IC del 95% -0.38 a 0.40).
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