Higher blood pressure in newborns links to salt preference. (Budding Tastes).Babies who tolerate a salty flavor have higher blood pressure on average than their less tolerant counterparts do, a new study shows. During the 30-month experiment, scientists measured blood pressures of 283 newborns at a Providence, R.I., hospital. The researchers also tested each baby's taste preferences using a special nipple nipple - Trackpoint that delivers tiny drops of fluids and then records the intensity and frequency of a baby's sucking. Each newborn received several rounds of drops of sweet liquids, salt-flavored ones, and plain water. Researchers conducted the taste tests 3 hours after a feeding. All the babies showed energetic sucking responses to the sugar-flavored fluid and slightly less enthusiasm for plain water. In contrast, most showed an aversion a·ver·sion n. 1. A fixed, intense dislike; repugnance, as of crowds. 2. A feeling of extreme repugnance accompanied by avoidance or rejection. to the taste of salt; they sucked less when given salt-flavored fluids rather than sweet liquids or plain water. Some of the babies, however, were less put off by the salt flavor than others were. On average, babies who had the highest diastolic Diastolic The phase of blood circulation in which the heart's pumping chambers (ventricles) are being filled with blood. During this phase, the ventricles are at their most relaxed, and the pressure against the walls of the arteries is at its lowest. blood pressure--the bottom number on a blood pressure reading--tolerated salty flavor better than the babies with lower diastolic blood pressure Diastolic blood pressure Blood pressure when the heart is resting between beats. Mentioned in: Hypertension did, the researchers report in the September Hypertension. One month later, follow-up examinations of 234 of the babies revealed that those who had been more tolerant of salt flavor still averaged significantly higher blood pressure, compared to the other babies. This finding is reminiscent of research indicating that elevated blood pressure begins early and "remains on a track" throughout life, says study coauthor Stephen H. Zinner, an internist internist /in·tern·ist/ (in-ter´nist) a specialist in internal medicine. in·ter·nist n. A physician specializing in internal medicine. at Harvard Medical School Harvard Medical School (HMS) is one of the graduate schools of Harvard University. It is a prestigious American medical school located in the Longwood Medical Area of the Mission Hill neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts. in Boston and Mount Auburn Mount Auburn is the name of several places in the United States:
"We know salt is related to blood pressure," says endocrinologist Myron H. Weinberger of Indiana University Indiana University, main campus at Bloomington; state supported; coeducational; chartered 1820 as a seminary, opened 1824. It became a college in 1828 and a university in 1838. The medical center (run jointly with Purdue Univ. Medical School in Indianapolis. "Developing tastes for salt may be something that occurs early in life and may then lead to high blood pressure later." The new study, he says, "is a very important addition [to this field] because it suggests these differences in the aversion to the salt taste exist when the infants are born." Zinner suggests researchers could create risk profiles for children with elevated blood pressure and a salt taste preference so pediatricians could intervene "to keep them off salt." While the causes of high blood pressure are poorly understood, there's evidence of a hereditary component. Indeed, in this study, babies with at least one grandparent who had high blood pressure had significantly higher average readings than did the other infants. In babies with a grandparent whose high blood pressure was serious enough to warrant medication, the link between salt taste tolerance and higher blood pressure was strongest, Zinner notes. |
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