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- <html>
- <head>
- <title>
- Salt, energy, metabolic rate, and longevity
- </title>
- </head>
- <body>
- <h1>
- Salt, energy, metabolic rate, and longevity
- </h1>
-
- <p></p>
- <p>
- In the 1950s, when the pharmaceutical industry was beginning to promote some new chemicals as diuretics to
- replace the traditional mercury compounds, Walter Kempner"s low-salt "rice diet" began to be discussed in
- the medical journals and other media. The diuretics were offered for treating high blood pressure, pulmonary
- edema, heart failure, "idiopathic edema," orthostatic edema and obesity, and other forms of water retention,
- including pregnancy, and since they functioned by causing sodium to be excreted in the urine, their sale was
- accompanied by advising the patients to reduce their salt intake to make the diuretic more effective.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- It was clear to some physicians (and to most veterinarians) that salt restriction, especially combined with
- salt-losing diuresis, was very harmful during pregnancy, but that combination became standard medical
- practice for many years, damaging millions of babies.
- </p>
- <p>
- Despite numerous publications showing that diuretics could cause the edematous problems that they were
- supposed to remedy, they have been one of the most profitable types of drug. Dietary salt restriction has
- become a cultural cliché, largely as a consequence of the belief that sodium causes edema and hypertension.
- </p>
- <p>
- Salt restriction, according to a review of about 100 studies (Alderman, 2004), lowers the blood pressure a
- few points. But that generally doesn"t relate to better health. In one study (3000 people, 4 years), there
- was a clear increase in mortality in the individuals who ate less salt. An extra few grams of salt per day
- was associated with a 36% reduction in "coronary events" (Alderman, et al., 1995). Another study (more than
- 11,000 people, 22 years) also showed an inverse relation between salt intake and mortality (Alderman, et
- al., 1997).
- </p>
- <p>
- Tom Brewer, an obstetrician who devoted his career to educating the public about the importance of prenatal
- nutrition, emphasizing adequate protein (especially milk), calories, and salt, was largely responsible for
- the gradual abandonment of the low-salt plus diuretics treatment for pregnant women. He explained that
- sodium, in association with serum albumin, is essential for maintaining blood volume. Without adequate
- sodium, the serum albumin is unable to keep water from leaving the blood and entering the tissues. The
- tissues swell as the volume of blood is reduced.
- </p>
- <p>
- During pregnancy, the reduced blood volume doesn"t adequately nourish and oxygenate the growing fetus, and
- the reduced circulation to the kidneys causes them to release a signal substance (renin) that causes the
- blood to circulate faster, under greater pressure. A low salt diet is just one of the things that can reduce
- kidney circulation and stimulate renin production. Bacterial endotoxin, and other things that cause
- excessive capillary permeability, edema, or shock-like symptoms, will activate renin secretion.
- </p>
- <p>
- The blood volume problem isn"t limited to the hypertension of pregnancy toxemia: "Plasma volume is usually
- lower in patients with essential hypertension than in normal subjects" (Tarazi, 1976).
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Several studies of preeclampsia or toxemia of pregnancy showed that supplementing the diet with salt would
- lower the women"s blood pressure, and prevent the other complications associated with toxemia (Shanklin and
- Hodin, 1979).
- </p>
- <p>
- It has been known for many years that decreasing sodium intake causes the body to respond adaptively,
- increasing the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS). The activation of this system is recognized as a
- factor in hypertension, kidney disease, heart failure, fibrosis of the heart, and other problems. Sodium
- restriction also increases serotonin, activity of the sympathetic nervous system, and plasminogen activator
- inhibitor type-1 (PAI-1), which contributes to the accumulation of clots and is associated with breast and
- prostate cancer. The sympathetic nervous system becomes hyperactive in preeclampsia (Metsaars, et al.,
- 2006).
- </p>
- <p>
- Despite the general knowledge of the relation of dietary salt to the RAA system, and its application by
- Brewer and others to the prevention of pregnancy toxemia, it isn"t common to see the information applied to
- other problems, such as aging and the stress-related degenerative diseases.
- </p>
- <p>
- Many young women periodically crave salt and sugar, especially around ovulation and premenstrually, when
- estrogen is high. Physiologically, this is similar to the food cravings of pregnancy. Premenstrual water
- retention is a common problem, and physicians commonly offer the same advice to cycling women that was
- offered as a standard treatment for pregnant women--the avoidance of salt, sometimes with a diuretic. But
- when women premenstrually increase their salt intake according to their craving, the water retention can be
- prevented.
- </p>
- <p>
- Blood volume changes during the normal menstrual cycle, and when the blood volume is low, it is usually
- because the water has moved into the tissues, causing edema. When estrogen is high, the osmolarity of the
- blood is low. (Courtar, et al., 2007; Stachenfeld, et al., 1999). Hypothyroidism (which increases the ratio
- of estrogen to progesterone) is a major cause of excessive sodium loss.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- The increase of adrenalin caused by salt restriction has many harmful effects, including insomnia. Many old
- people have noticed that a low sodium diet disturbs their sleep, and that eating their usual amount of salt
- restores their ability to sleep. The activity of the sympathetic nervous system increases with aging, so
- salt restriction is exacerbating one of the basic problems of aging. Chronically increased activity of the
- sympathetic (adrenergic) nervous system contributes to capillary leakage, insulin resistance (with increased
- free fatty acids in the blood), and degenerative changes in the brain (Griffith and Sutin, 1996).
- </p>
- <p>
- The flexibility of blood vessels (compliance) is decreased by a low-salt diet, and vascular stiffness caused
- by over-activity of the sympathetic nervous system is considered to be an important factor in hypertension,
- especially with aging.
- </p>
- <p>
- Pregnancy toxemia/preeclampsia involves increased blood pressure and capillary permeability, and an excess
- of prolactin. Prolactin secretion is increased by serotonin, which is one of the substances increased by
- salt restriction, but prolactin itself can promote the loss of sodium in the urine (Ibarra, et al., 2005),
- and contributes to vascular leakage and hypertension.
- </p>
- <p>
- In pregnancy, estrogen excess or progesterone deficiency is an important factor in the harmful effects of
- sodium restriction and protein deficiency. A deficiency of protein contributes to hypothyroidism, which is
- responsible for the relative estrogen excess.
- </p>
- <p>
- Protein, salt, thyroid, and progesterone happen to be thermogenic, increasing heat production and
- stabilizing body temperature at a higher level. Prolactin and estrogen lower the temperature set-point.
- </p>
- <p>
- The downward shift of temperature and energy metabolism in toxemia or salt deprivation tends to slow the use
- of oxygen, increasing the glycolytic use of sugar, and contributing to the formation of lactic acid, rather
- than carbon dioxide. In preeclampsia, serum lactate is increased, even while free fatty acids are
- interfering with the use of glucose.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- One way of looking at those facts is to see that a lack of sodium slows metabolism, lowers carbon dioxide
- production, and creates inflammation, stress and degeneration. Rephrasing it, sodium stimulates energy
- metabolism, increases carbon dioxide production, and protects against inflammation and other maladaptive
- stress reactions.
- </p>
- <p>
- In recent years, Weissman"s "wear-and-tear" theory of aging, and Pearl"s "rate of living" theory have been
- clearly refuted by metabolic studies that are showing that intensified mitochondrial respiration decreases
- cellular damage, and supports a longer life-span.
- </p>
- <p>
- Many dog owners are aware that small dogs eat much more food in proportion to their size than big dogs do.
- And small dogs have a much greater life expectancy than big dogs, in some cases about twice as long
- (Speakman, 2003).
- </p>
- <p>
- Organisms as different as yeasts and rodents show a similar association of metabolic intensity and
- life-span. A variety of hamster with a 20% higher metabolic rate lived 15% longer than hamsters with an
- average metabolic rate (Oklejewicz and Daan, 2002).
- </p>
- <p>
- Individuals within a strain of mice were found to vary considerably in their metabolic rate. The 25% of the
- mice with the highest rate used 30% more energy (per gram of body weight) than the 25% with the lowest
- metabolic rate, and lived 36% longer (Speakman, et al., 2000).
- </p>
- <p>
- The mitochondria of these animals are "uncoupled," that is, their use of oxygen isn"t directly proportional
- to the production of ATP. This means that they are producing more carbon dioxide without necessarily
- producing more ATP, and that even at rest they are using a considerable amount of energy.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- One important function of carbon dioxide is to regulate the movement of positively charged alkali metal
- ions, such as sodium and calcium. When too much calcium enters a cell it activates many enzymes, prevents
- muscle and nerve cells from relaxing, and ultimately kills the cell. The constant formation of acidic carbon
- dioxide in the cell allows the cell to remove calcium, along with the small amount of sodium which is
- constantly entering the cell.
- </p>
- <p>
- When there is adequate sodium in the extracellular fluid, the continuous inward movement of sodium ions into
- the resting cell activates an enzyme, sodium-potassium ATPase, causing ATP to break down into ADP and
- phosphate, which stimulates the consumption of fuel and oxygen to maintain an adequate level of ATP.
- Increasing the concentration of sodium increases the energy consumption and carbon dioxide production of the
- cell. The sodium, by increasing carbon dioxide production, protects against the excitatory, toxic effects of
- the intracellular calcium.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hypertonic solutions, containing more than the normal concentration of sodium (from about twice normal to 8
- or 10 times normal) are being used to rescuscitate people and animals after injury. Rather than just
- increasing blood volume to restore circulation, the hypertonic sodium restores cellular energy production,
- increasing oxygen consumption and heat production while reducing free radical production, improves the
- contraction and relaxation of the heart muscle, and reduces inflammation, vascular permeability, and edema.
- </p>
- <p>
- Seawater, which is hypertonic to our tissues, has often been used for treating wounds, and much more
- concentrated salt solutions have been found effective for accelerating wound healing (Mangete, et al.,
- 1993).
- </p>
- <p>
- There have been several publications suggesting that increasing the amount of salt in the diet might cause
- stomach cancer, because countries such as Japan with a high salt intake have a high incidence of stomach
- cancer.
- </p>
- <p>
- Studies in which animals were fed popular Japanese foods--"salted cuttlefish guts, broiled, salted, dried
- sardines, pickled radish, and soy sauce"--besides a chemical carcinogen, showed that the Japanese foods
- increased the number of tumors. But another study, adding only soy sauce (with a salt content of about 18%)
- to the diet did not increase the incidence of cancer, in another it was protective against stomach cancer
- (Benjamin, et al., 1991). Several studies show that dried fish and pickled vegetables are carcinogenic,
- probably because of the oxidized fats, and other chemical changes, and fungal contamination, which are
- likely to be worse without the salt. Animals fed dried fish were found to have mutagenic urine, apparently
- as a result of toxic materials occurring in various preserved foods (Fong, et al., 1979).
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Although preserved foods develop many peculiar toxins, even fresh fish in the diet have been found to be
- associated with increased cancer risk (Phukan, et al., 2006).
- </p>
- <p>
- When small animals were given a milliliter of a saturated salt solution with the carcinogen, the number of
- tumors was increased with the salt. However, when the salt was given with mucin, it had no cancer promoting
- effect. Since the large amount of a saturated salt solution breaks down the stomach"s protective mucus
- coating, the stomach cells were not protected from the carcinogen. Rather than showing that salt causes
- stomach cancer, the experiments showed that a cup or more of saturated salt solution, or several ounces of
- pure salt, shouldn"t be ingested at the same time as a strong carcinogen.
- </p>
- <p>
- Some studies have found pork to be associated with cancer of the esophagous (Nagai, et al., 1982), thyroid
- (Markaki, et al., 2003), and other organs, but an experiment with beef, chicken, or bacon diet in rats
- provides another perspective on the role of salt in carcinogenesis. After being given a carcinogen, rats
- were fed meat diets, containing either 30% or 60% of freeze-dried fried beef, chicken, or bacon. Neither
- beef nor chicken changed the incidence of precancerous lesions in the intestine, but the incidence was
- reduced by 12% in the animals on the 30% bacon diet, and by 20% in rats getting the diet with 60% bacon.
- Salt apparently made the difference.
- </p>
- <p>
- Other protective effects of increased sodium are that it improves immunity (Junger, et al., 1994), reduces
- vascular leakiness, and alleviates inflammation (Cara, et al., 1988). All of these effects would tend to
- protect against the degenerative diseases, including tumors, atherosclerosis, and Alzheimer"s disease. The
- RAA system appears to be crucially involved in all kinds of sickness and degeneration, but the protective
- effects of sodium are more basic than just helping to prevent activation of that system.
- </p>
- <p>
- A slight decrease in temperature can promote inflammation (Matsui, et al., 2006). The thermogenic
- substances--dietary protein, sodium, sucrose, thyroid and progesterone--are antiinflammatory for many
- reasons, but very likely the increased temperature itself is important.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- A poor reaction to stress, with increased cortisol, can raise the body temperature by accelerating the
- breakdown and resynthesis of proteins, but adaptive resistance to stress increases the temperature by
- increasing the consumption of oxygen and fuel. In the presence of increased cortisol, abdominal fat
- increases, along with circulating fatty acids and calcium, as mitochondrial respiration is suppressed.
- </p>
- <p>
- When mice are chilled, they spontaneously prefer slightly salty water, rather than fresh, and it increases
- their heat production (Dejima, et al., 1996). When rats are given 0.9 per cent sodium chloride solution with
- their regular food, their heat production increases, and their body fat, including abdominal fat, decreases
- (Bryant, et al., 1984). These responses to increased dietary sodium are immediate. Part of the effect of
- sodium involves regulatory processes in the brain, which are sensitive to the ratio between sodium and
- calcium. Decreasing sodium, or increasing calcium, causes the body"s metabolism to shift away from
- thermogenesis and accelerated respiration.
- </p>
- <p>
- Regulating intracellular calcium by increasing the production of carbon dioxide is probably a basic
- mechanism in sodium"s protection against inflammation and excitatory cell damage and degeneration.
- </p>
- <p>
- Cortisol"s suppression of mitochondrial respiration is closely associated with its ability to increase
- intracellular calcium. Cortisol blocks the thermogenic effects of sodium, allowing intracellular calcium to
- damage cells. With aging, the tissues are more susceptible to these processes.
- </p>
- <p>
- The thermogenic effects of sodium can be seen in long-term studies, as well as short. A low-sodium diet
- accelerates the decrease in heat production that normally occurs with aging, lowering the metabolic rate of
- brown fat and body temperature, and increasing the fat content of the body, as well as the activity of the
- fat synthesizing enzyme (Xavier, et al., 2003).
- </p>
- <p>
- Activation of heat production and increased body temperature might account for some of the GABA-like
- sedative effects of increased sodium. Increasing GABA in the brain increases brown fat heat production
- (Horton, et al., 1988). Activation of heat production by brown fat increases slow wave sleep (Dewasmes, et
- al., 2003), the loss of which is characteristic of aging. (In adult humans, the skeletal muscles have
- heat-producing functions similar to brown fat.)
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Now that inflammation is recognized as having a central role in the degenerative diseases, the fact that
- renin, angiotensin, and aldosterone all contribute to inflammation and are increased by a sodium deficiency,
- should arouse interest in exploring the therapeutic uses of sodium supplementation, and the integrated use
- of all of the factors that normally support respiratory energy production, especially thyroid and
- progesterone. Progesterone"s antagonism to aldosterone has been known for many years, and the synthetic
- antialdosterone drugs are simply poor imitations of progesterone.
- </p>
- <p>
- But the drug industry is interested in selling new drugs to block the formation and action of each of the
- components of the RAAS, rather than an inexpensive method (such as nutrition) to normalize the system.
- </p>
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-
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-
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