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It is time to end the low-fat myth, Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) nutrition experts told food industry leaders at the seventh annual World of Healthy Flavors Conference held in Napa, CA, from January 19 to 21, 2011. The conference, co-hosted by the Culinary Institute of America and HSPH, brings together nutrition researchers with representatives from schools, supermarkets, and food industry goliaths such as Burger King, The Olive Garden, and Panera Bread to share strategies for offering Americans healthier menu options
Too much salt
Symptoms of increased salt intake include nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea and abdominal cramps. High concentrations of sodium in the body can also result from excessive water or fluid loss. Persistently high levels of sodium in the blood can result in swelling, high blood pressure, difficulty in breathing, and heart failure, and may be fatal.
A high dietary salt intake is an important causal factor in the development of hypertension (high blood pressure), which currently affects 32 per cent of men and 30 per cent of women in the UK. Hypertension increases the risk of strain on the heart, enlarges the heart muscle, prevents an adequate blood (and therefore oxygen) supply from reaching the heart, and may lead to heart failure, angina or heart attack.
List Of Foods High In Sodium
Beet Greens
Beets
Black-eyed beans
Buttermilk
Canned food
Celery
Cheese
Chick peas
Corn meal
Dry lotus stems
Fish
Fruits
Garbanzo beans
Kelp
Leafy vegetables
Legumes
Meat
Milk
Olives
Oysters
Pulses
Salt
Salted butter or margarine
Sauces and seasonings
Sauerkraut
Self-rising flour
Shrimp
Spinach
Swiss Chard
Wakame
Whelks
Originally posted by TheCommentator
reply to post by BBalazs
The biggest problem is sodium.
But theres a million problems in our diets today..
Originally posted by JohnnyTHSeed
reply to post by BBalazs
So we get sodium from food.
We also need sugar - from food.
Our body produces neither.