EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE
Monday, December 17, 2001
5:00 p.m. EST |
|
Contact:
NHLBI Communications Office
(301) 496-4236 |
NHLBI Study Finds DASH Diet And Reduced Sodium Lowers Blood Pressure For All
- For those with hypertension: 12/6 mm Hg (systolic/diastolic); for those without hypertension, 7/4 mm Hg.
- For those over age 45, 12/6 mm Hg; for those 45 or younger, 6/3 mm Hg.
- For women, 11/5 mm Hg; for men, 7/4 mm Hg.
- For African Americans, 10/5 mm Hg; for non-African Americans, 8/4 mm Hg.
Other results include:
- Compared with the typical American diet, the DASH diet alone (at
the higher sodium level) reduced blood pressure by about 6/3 mm Hg for
African Americans, and 6/2 mm Hg for other races.
- For those with hypertension, reductions from the DASH diet
alone were 7/3 mm Hg; and for those without hypertension, the reductions
were 5/3 mm Hg.
- The effects of sodium reduction appeared in all subgroups
and were greater for those who ate the typical American diet, compared
with those on the DASH diet. The effects from sodium reduction were
particularly great for those with hypertension, African Americans,
women, and those over age 45. Sodium reduction in those eating the
control diet resulted in lower systolic and diastolic pressures by 8.3
mm Hg and 4.4 mm Hg, respectively, in hypertensives, and 5.4 and 2.8 mm
Hg, respectively, in non-hypertensives.
"Following the DASH diet and reducing the intake of dietary sodium are
two non-drug approaches that work to control blood pressure," said Dr.
Denise Simons-Morton, Leader of the NHLBI Prevention Scientific Research
Group and a DASH coauthor. "The blood pressure reductions achieved
from this combination came in only 4 weeks and persisted through the
duration of the study. Ideally, Americans should use both the DASH diet
and reduced sodium approaches but, even if they do only one, they'll
still reap significant health benefits.
"If the U.S. food supply were lower in sodium," added Simons-Morton, "it
would help lower levels of blood pressure in the general population."
To interview an expert about this study, contact the NHLBI Communications Office at (301) 496-4236.
More information about the DASH diet and related heart-health topics can be found online at
www.nhlbi.nih.gov.
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