Original Article
Journal of Human Hypertension (2005) 19, 55–60. doi:10.1038/sj.jhh.1001782 Published online 7 October 2004
A randomized trial on sodium reduction in two developing countries
T Forrester1, A Adeyemo2, S Soarres-Wynter1, L Sargent1, F Bennett1, R Wilks1, A Luke3, E Prewitt3, H Kramer3 and R S Cooper3
- 1Tropical Medical Research Institute, University of the West Indies, Kingston, Jamaica
- 2Department of Pediatrics, University College Hospital, University of Ibadan, Ibadan, Nigeria
- 3Department of Preventive Medicine and Epidemiology, Loyola University Medical Center, Maywood, IL, USA
Correspondence: Dr RS Cooper, Department of Preventive Medicine and Epidemiology, Loyola University Medical Center, Maywood, IL 60153, USA. E-mail: rcooper@lumc.edu
Received 27 March 2004; Revised 5 July 2004; Accepted 5 July 2004; Published online 7 October 2004.
Abstract
Hypertension remains the most common cardiovascular risk factor in developing countries, yet the majority of patients have no access to pharmacological therapy. Population-wide preventive strategies, such as salt restriction, are an attractive alternative, but experience in resource-poor settings is limited. To address this question, we conducted a randomized crossover study of salt restriction in adults living in Nigeria and Jamaica in order to estimate the mean blood pressure (BP) response. After a 4-week run-in period to determine willingness to adhere to a low-salt diet, 56 Jamaicans and 58 Nigerians completed an 8-week crossover study of low-salt and high-salt intake. Baseline BPs were in the normotensive range (systolic=125 mmHg in Jamaica, 114 mmHg in Nigeria). Baseline urinary sodium excretion was 86.8 and 125.6 mEq/day in Nigeria and Jamaica, respectively. The mean difference between urinary sodium excretion at baseline and at the end of the 3-week low-sodium phase was 33.6 mEq/day in Nigeria and 57.5 mEq/day in Jamaica. During the high-sodium phase, mean change in urinary sodium excretion from baseline to week 3 was 35.0 and 5.5 mEq/day in Nigeria and Jamaica, respectively. The mean change in systolic BP ('high' vs 'low' sodium phase) was approximately 5 mmHg in both groups. This study suggests that the efficacy of sodium reduction in developing countries equals those noted in more affluent cultures. If promoted on a wide scale, sodium reduction could be used to treat persons with established hypertension, and more importantly, to prevent age-related increases in BP in poor communities.
Keywords:
sodium reduction, BP, developing countries
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