While reducing salt intake has been the focus of dietary advice to control high blood pressure (hypertension), a new study suggests that upping your potassium intake can be at least as important.
The new research, published today (Feb. 21) in the Journal of Human Hypertension, provides insight into the central role of potassium in managing a condition that kills more than 11 million people every year.
Lead author Dr. Liping Huang, Research Fellow at The George Institute, said that the effects on blood pressure of both dietary sodium and dietary potassium have both been known for a long time. But only with recent work on potassium-enriched salt substitutes has the huge potential for increasing dietary potassium become a focus.
“High levels of sodium intake and low levels of potassium intake are widespread, and both are linked to high blood pressure and greater risk of stroke, heart disease and premature death,” she said.
“Using a salt substitute where part of the sodium chloride is replaced with potassium chloride addresses both problems at once. But the relative contributions of sodium reduction versus potassium supplementation were not well understood.”
Researchers analyzed data from The George Institute’s large-scale randomized trial, the Salt Substitute and Stroke Study (SSaSS), which involved 20,995 participants followed for five years. The study showed clear reductions in the risk of stroke (14%), major cardiovascular events (13%) and premature death (12%) from switching regular salt for potassium-enriched salt.
The researchers based their analyses on the “gold standard” measure of sodium and potassium in the urine of trial participants. These data were combined with other external data sources that describe the dose-response relationships between changes in sodium, potassium and blood pressure. They used a range of different data sets and different methods to double-check their findings.
They found that the supplementary potassium accounted for between 61% and 88% of the blood pressure lowering effects recorded in the trial. In every case, the results indicated that the majority of the blood pressure fall was attributable to the increase in dietary potassium rather than the fall in dietary sodium.
“We have always known that potassium has a role to play in blood pressure control, but until we did these analyses, we didn’t realize just how important it could be,” Dr. Huang said. “The findings in this study may be particularly pronounced because people started at low levels of potassium consumption, but there are probably billions of people around the world with similar consumption levels,” she added.
Potassium is an essential mineral found in a variety of whole foods, including legumes, nuts, leafy green vegetables and fruits such as bananas, kiwis and dates. High levels of potassium are one of the reasons fresh fruits and vegetables are so good for you. Food processing tends to reduce the amount of potassium in products, and it is often replaced by sodium—a cheaper ingredient.
Current dietary guidelines recommend a potassium intake of more than 3.5 g/day, but a recent study found global mean potassium intake was just 2.25 g/day, with only 35% of the global population estimated to achieve this target. It also showed that none of the included 52 countries reported combined intakes of sodium and potassium that met World Health Organization targets.
Dr. Huang said that the number of people living with hypertension had doubled in the past 30 years to about 1.3 billion and it kills around 20 people every minute.
“People find it hard to stick to dietary changes recommended to reduce sodium and increase potassium,” she said.
“Salt substitutes are particularly interesting in this regard, because most people can make the switch to potassium-enriched salt without much difficulty—in our SSaSS trial more than 90% of participants assigned to use the salt substitute were still using it five years on.”
“With potassium-enriched salt substitutes, we have a highly feasible and low-cost opportunity to generate a massive global health benefit,” Dr. Huang added.
The weight of the evidence has prompted a call to include recommendations on low-sodium potassium-enriched salt in hypertension treatment guidelines published by an international group of experts last month in the journal Hypertension.
More information:
Liping Huang et al, The contribution of sodium reduction and potassium increase to the blood pressure lowering observed in the Salt Substitute and Stroke Study, Journal of Human Hypertension (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s41371-024-00896-4
Provided by
George Institute for Global Health
Citation:
New research suggests boosting potassium is key for blood pressure control (2024, February 21)