Low salt intake may raise risk of heart attack: Study

Low salt intake may raise risk of heart attack: Study

ISLAMABAD: Health guidelines on salt intake recommend consumption levels that are too low and this may increase the risk of a fatal heart attack, researchers have warned.

According to current guidelines issued by the World Health Organisation, adults should consume less than five grams of salt a day.

However, researchers in Canada emphasised in the study that it was not enough and there is a need to increase the maximum salt intake guide, overturning conventional wisdom that says eating too much salt is a serious health risk, the European Heart Journal reported.

"It is futile to target such low intakes and moreover, it may well be harmful. Studies show below three grammes of sodium per day increase mortality, heart attack and heart failure," said Salim Yusuf, Professor at McMaster University in Canada.

Reducing salt intake to overly low levels undermines the body's natural balance, Yusuf said.

"Reaching sodium intake levels below 2.3 gm per day over a sustainable period of time is not feasible. There is no evidence that this is beneficial and there are concerns it could be harmful," the report said.

Instead an adult should take between 7.5 and 12.5 gm of salt a day, equivalent to three and five grammes of sodium, Yusuf elaborated. (APP)