Abstract

ObjectiveResearch into dietary factors associated with hypertension has focused on the sodium component of salt. However, chloride has distinct physiological effects that may surpass the effect of sodium on blood pressure. This study aims to separate the specific effects of chloride and sodium intake on blood pressure.MethodsWe studied 5673 participants from the Prevention of Renal and Vascular End-Stage Disease(PREVEND) study. Urinary chloride(uCl) and sodium(uNa) were measured in two 24-hour collections. We used generalized-linear-regression to evaluate the relation of uCl and uNa with baseline blood pressure and Cox-proportional-hazards-analysis to assess the association with hypertension. Multicollinearity was assessed with Ridge regression.ResultsBaseline 24-hour uCl was 135±39mmol and uNa was 144±54mmol. The correlation between uCl and uNa was high (Pearson’s r = 0.96). UCl and uNa had similar non-significant positive and linear associations with blood pressure. In 3515 normotensive patients, 1021 patients developed hypertension during a median follow-up of 7.4 years. UCl and uNa had a comparable but non-significant J-shaped effect on the risk of hypertension. Adding both uCl and uNa to the same model produced instability, demonstrated by Ridge coefficients that converged or changed sign. The single index of uNa minus uCl showed a non-significant higher risk of hypertension of 2% per 10mmol/24-hour difference (HR1.02, 95%CI 0.98–1.06).ConclusionUCl and uNa had similar positive but non-significant associations with blood pressure and risk of hypertension and their effects could not be disentangled. Hence, the alleged adverse effects of high salt intake could be due to sodium, chloride or both. This encourages further study into the effect of chloride in order to complement dietary recommendations currently focused on sodium alone.

Highlights

  • Hypertension is an important modifiable risk factor for renal and cardiovascular disease[1]

  • The alleged adverse effects of high salt intake could be due to sodium, chloride or both

  • This encourages further study into the effect of chloride in order to complement dietary recommendations currently focused on sodium alone

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Summary

Introduction

Hypertension is an important modifiable risk factor for renal and cardiovascular disease[1]. Research into nutritional factors associated with development of hypertension has mainly focused on the cations sodium and potassium[2,3]. The importance of chloride in hypertension was suggested more than a century ago, its direct role on blood pressure is still equivocal[4]. Preliminary data suggested that the negative effects of high sodium salt consumption may depend on concomitant chloride intake. In animals studies the chloride component of dietary salt produced hypertension and suppressed renin release, independent of the associated cation[10,11,12,13,14]. The beneficial effect of potassium supplementation might be mitigated by concomitant chloride intake[19,20,21]. Most studies investigating potential benefits of sodium restriction, did not include chloride in their analysis[22,23]

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