dietary intake of sodium by children: why it matters Flashcards

1
Q

What is the “chronic disease risk reduction” level (for sodium intake)?

A

intake above which intake reduction is expected to reduce chronic disease risk within an apparent healthy population

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2
Q

What is the tolerable upper level of sodium intake definition?

A

highest level of nutrient intake that is likely to post no adverse health effects for nearly all people in a particular group (adverse health effects = toxicological risk)

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3
Q

What are the top 5 dietary sources of sodium?

A

baked products, mixed dishes, processed meats, cheese, soup

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4
Q

Do M or F take in more salt?

A

boys tend to have more sodium than girls because overall caloric intake higher

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5
Q

What is the recommended salt intake for children?

What is the chronic disease risk reduction intake?

0-6 mo

7-12 mo

1-3 yr

4-8 yr

9-13 yr

14-70 yr

A
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6
Q

What are health consequences of high sodium?

A
  1. Hypertension
    • reduced dietary sodium associated with small reductions in SBP
  2. Obesity
    • high sodium intake may be marker for poor quality diet overall (consume processed foods, high calorie, sugar, fat foods)
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7
Q

What is “sodium sensitive”?

Who is it more common in?

A

people who experience a large BP response to a change in sodium load

More common in: people with HTN, African-American, metabolic syndrome

LBW (<2500g) kids also at higher risk for HTN

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8
Q

Are there Health risks with reducing sodium?

A

insufficient evidence (affecting insulin resistance, blood lipids, catecholamines, cardiovascular disease risk factors)

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9
Q

Recommendations to lower salt intake?

A
  • Public policy
    • reduce sodium consumption from processed foods:
      • set mandatory sodium reduction targets for food industry (80% sodium oconsumed from processed & prepackaged foods; only 11% from added salt)
      • regulate marketing of foods high in sodium to children & youth
      • require front-of-package labelling for foods high in sodium (15% daily value)
    • Apply nutritional guidelines or standards to:
      • procured and prepared foods in public institutions (childcare settings, hospitals, schools, cafeteria, vending machines)
  • Pediatric practice
    • assess family dietary habits & educate patients on reducing sodium intake using:
      • recommended sodium intake ranges
      • Nutrition facts table and % daily value for sodium on pre-packaged food labels
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10
Q

Where does our dietary sodium come from?

A

(80% sodium consumed from processed & prepackaged foods; only 11% from added salt)

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