And a 2007 study published in the European Journal of Epidemiology followed 1,500 older people for five years and found no association
between urinary sodium levels and the risk of coronary vascular disease or death.
And a 2007 study published in the European Journal of Epidemiology followed 1,500 older people for five years and found no association
between urinary sodium levels and the risk of coronary vascular disease or death.
Not exact matches
Indeed, research doesn't always support the notion that salt causes high blood pressure: A large, multicenter study known as INTERSALT compared
urinary sodium levels — an accurate indicator of prior
sodium consumption — with hypertension in more than 10,000 people in 1988 and found no statistically significant association
between them.
The association
between salt intake as estimated by twenty - four - hour
urinary sodium excretion and the composite outcome of death and serious cardiovascular events was assessed over a median of 4.2 years for both groups of subjects.
In each group,
urinary sodium excretion changed little
between the run - in and intervention phases.