# Usefulness of the Reborn Soup for the Reduction of Salt Intake

**Authors:** Yuko Ohta, Satoko Sakata, Kazuhiro Ohta, Masahiko Kusano, Ritsuko Fujisawa, Yuji Komorita, Yukie Kuwahara, Yuki Fukamatsu, Hiroshi Tsuruta, Hidetoshi Nakamura, Takuya Tsuchihashi

PMC · DOI: 10.1155/2024/6090466 · 2024-08-28

## TL;DR

This study found that reborn soup can reduce salt intake while maintaining palatability, helping people consume less salt without sacrificing taste.

## Contribution

The study introduces reborn soup as a novel method to reduce salt intake while maintaining perceived palatability.

## Key findings

- Reborn soup (C) scored higher in palatability than the lower-salt commercial soup (B).
- Participants with high salt intake found reborn soup more palatable than lower-salt alternatives.
- Most participants exceeded recommended daily salt intake targets.

## Abstract

The purpose of the present study was to investigate the influence of reborn soup on the perceptions of saltiness and palatability.

Subjects comprised 103 staff working at Kokura Daiichi Hospital (22 males, 81 females, and mean age: 35 ± 12 years old). They tested soups (commercially available soup with 0.9% NaCl solutions (A), commercially available soup with 0.6% NaCl solutions (B), and reborn soup diluted to 0.6% NaCl solutions (C)). Evaluations of saltiness and palatability for each solution were conducted using a visual analog scale in a double-blinded randomized manner. We estimated 24-hour salt excretion using spot urine samples to estimate salt intake and also assessed blood pressure, the awareness of salt intake using a self-description questionnaire score, and other confounding factors including lifestyle factors.

In all subjects, the average estimated salt intake was 9.0 ± 2.0 g/day, and the rates at which subjects met the established salt intake targets were 15.1% in 73 females without hypertension (<6.5 g/day), 23.5% in 17 males without hypertension (<7.5 g/day), and 0.0% in 13 subjects with hypertension (<6.0 g/day). In both saltiness and palatability, B scored significantly lower than A, but C scored significantly higher than B. Salt intake levels were categorized into tertiles (Q1, lowest; Q3, highest). C scored significantly higher for palatability in the Q1 group than in the Q3 group.

Most participants exceeded the established targets of salt intake. The high-salt-intake group might be able to feel less palatable. Our results indicate that reborn soup may be effective in reducing salt intake without loss of palatability.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** NaCl (PubChem CID 5234)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** hypertension (MESH:D006973)
- **Chemicals:** NaCl (MESH:D012965), Salt (MESH:D012492)

## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11374420/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11374420