AI Article Synopsis

  • Many guidelines suggest that people with type 2 diabetes should lower their salt intake, but the link between salt and mortality in these patients hasn't been studied thoroughly.
  • A study followed 638 patients over nearly 10 years, measuring sodium excretion through 24-hour urine tests, and found that higher sodium levels were connected to lower overall and cardiovascular mortality.
  • The findings indicate that lower sodium excretion was linked to higher mortality rates, raising questions about the appropriateness of current guidelines recommending salt reduction for patients with type 2 diabetes and the need for further research on this topic.

Article Abstract

Objective: Many guidelines recommend that patients with type 2 diabetes should aim to reduce their intake of salt. However, the precise relationship between dietary salt intake and mortality in patients with type 2 diabetes has not been previously explored.

Research Design And Methods: Six hundred and thirty-eight patients attending a single diabetes clinic were followed in a prospective cohort study. Baseline sodium excretion was estimated from 24-h urinary collections (24hU(Na)). The predictors of all-cause and cardiovascular mortality were determined by Cox regression and competing risk modeling, respectively.

Results: The mean baseline 24hU(Na) was 184 ± 73 mmol/24 h, which remained consistent throughout the follow-up (intraindividual coefficient of variation [CV] 23 ± 11%). Over a median of 9.9 years, there were 175 deaths, 75 (43%) of which were secondary to cardiovascular events. All-cause mortality was inversely associated with 24hU(Na), after adjusting for other baseline risk factors (P < 0.001). For every 100 mmol rise in 24hU(Na), all-cause mortality was 28% lower (95% CI 6-45%, P = 0.02). After adjusting for the competing risk of noncardiovascular death and other predictors, 24hU(Na) was also significantly associated with cardiovascular mortality (sub-hazard ratio 0.65 [95% CI 0.44-0.95]; P = 0.03).

Conclusions: In patients with type 2 diabetes, lower 24-h urinary sodium excretion was paradoxically associated with increased all-cause and cardiovascular mortality. Interventional studies are necessary to determine if dietary salt has a causative role in determining adverse outcomes in patients with type 2 diabetes and the appropriateness of guidelines advocating salt restriction in this setting.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3041211PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.2337/dc10-1723DOI Listing

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