High salt intake appears to have no adverse effect on blood pressure in adolescent girls, a new US study has claimed.
The study also found that girls who consumed 2,400 mg per day or more of potassium had lower blood pressure at the end of adolescence.
The scientific community has historically believed most people in the US consume too much salt in their diets.
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However, in the new study eating 3,000 mg per day of salt or more appeared to have no adverse effect on blood pressure in adolescent girls.
Lynn L Moore, of the Boston University School of Medicine, and coauthors examined the long-term effects of dietary sodium and potassium on blood pressure at the end of adolescence.
The authors used data from the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute's Growth and Health Study and participants included 2,185 black and white girls (ages 9 to 10) who were followed up for 10 years.
The authors found no evidence that higher sodium intakes had an adverse effect on adolescent blood pressure.
Some analysis showed that those girls consuming 3,500 mg per day or more of salt had generally lower diastolic blood pressures than girls who consumed less than 2,500 mg per day.
Food consumption was based on self reports and blood pressure was measured annually, 'Medical Xpress' reported.
Overall, girls in the highest category of potassium intake (2,400 mg per day or more) had lower late-adolescent systolic and diastolic blood pressure than those girls who consumed less potassium, the results showed.
Girls who consumed the most sodium and potassium consumed the most calories too, along with the most dairy, fruits, vegetables and fibre, according to the results.
"This prospective study showed that black and white adolescent girls who consumed more dietary potassium had lower BPs [blood pressures] in later adolescence," researchers said.
"In contrast, the data indicated no overall effect of sodium intake alone on BP, and, thus do not support the call for a global reduction in sodium intake among children and adolescents.
"This study emphasises the need to develop methods for estimating salt sensitivity to be used in future studies of high-risk populations and points to the potential health risks associated with the existing low dietary potassium intakes among US children and adolescents," researchers said.
The study was published in the journal JAMA Pediatrics.