The association between salt intake and arterial stiffness is influenced by a sex-specific mediating effect through blood pressure in normotensive adults: The ELSA-Brasil study

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Abstract

High salt intake is known to increase blood pressure (BP) and also to be associated with carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity (cf-PWV). However, recent data showed a sex-specific pattern in the salt-induced rise of BP. Thus, we aimed to investigate whether the association between salt intake and arterial stiffness also has a sex-specific pattern. A total of 7755 normotensive participants with a validated 12-h overnight urine collection in which daily salt intake was estimated were included. cf-PWV, as well as clinical and anthropometric parameters, was measured. Salt intake positively correlated with cf-PWV, in which the linear regression was steeper in women than in men (0.0199 ± 0.0045 vs 0.0326 ± 0.0052 m/s per gram of salt, P

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Baldo, M. P., Brant, L. C. C., Cunha, R. S., Molina, M. del C. B., Griep, R. H., Barreto, S. M., … Mill, J. G. (2019). The association between salt intake and arterial stiffness is influenced by a sex-specific mediating effect through blood pressure in normotensive adults: The ELSA-Brasil study. Journal of Clinical Hypertension, 21(12), 1771–1779. https://doi.org/10.1111/jch.13728

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