Consuming excess dietary salt may result in late onset of puberty
that can lead to behavioural problems, stress and reduced fertility, new
research says.
The researchers found that rats fed a high salt diet (equivalent to
three or four times the recommended daily allowance for humans) had a
significant delay in reaching puberty compared to those fed a normal
(low) salt diet.
Interestingly, rats that had salt completely excluded from their diet
also had delayed puberty. The findings suggest that salt intake is
necessary for onset of puberty but that excesses can affect reproductive
health.
“Our research highlights for the first time that the salt content of a
diet has a more significant effect on reproductive health than the fat
content,” said lead researcher Dori Pitynski from University of Wyoming
in the US.
“High fat diet is thought to accelerate the onset of puberty but our
work demonstrates that rats fed a high salt diet even with a high fat
diet will still show a delay in puberty onset,” Pitynski pointed out.
Recent guidelines from WHO state that populations around the world
are consuming much more salt than is physiologically necessary, and
certainly more that the WHO recommended daily allowance of five gram of
salt per day for adults, the study noted.
Sodium is found naturally in a variety of foods, including milk,
cream and eggs. It is also found, in much higher amounts, in processed
foods, such as bread, processed meats like bacon, snack foods as well as
in condiments such as soy sauce and stock cubes; which are becoming
more prevalent in the Western diet.
The findings were presented at the European Congress of Endocrinology in Dublin, Ireland.
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