Abstract
A succinct overview of the nutritional management of hypertension, past, present, and future is presented. Prior to 1945, the low sodium diet and the rice–fruit diet were shown to be effective in reducing the blood pressure to normal levels in 35–40% of hypertensive patients. Between 1945 and the present, many studies were made on the effects of alcohol, water hardness, obesity, moderate restriction of sodium with increased potassium intake, increased dietary calcium, low animal and high unsaturated fat intake, and increased amounts of fiber in the diet. Criticisms are made of the very small magnitude, even if statistically significant, of blood pressure decreases and the too-short control periods in many instances, and also concerning the assumption of use of 24-h urinary sodium as an accurate index of the sodium intake, and of urinary creatinine as a physiological reference standard against the excretion of sodium. The author mentions, for possible future research, long-term studies of the effects of diets moderately restricted in sodium and high in potassium, of reducing weight and increasing physical activity in obese hypertensives, and of low animal and high polyunsaturated fat diets in patients with mild essential hypertension.
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Subject
Physiology (medical),Pharmacology,General Medicine,Physiology
Cited by
6 articles.
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