Increased fluid intake and blood pressure in healthy children: a randomized controlled trial. The SPA Project
Gianluigi Ardissino, Laura Viola, Maria Cristina Mancuso, Thomas Ria, Giacomo Tamburini, Daniele Rossetti, Letizia Dato, Andrea Gualtieri, Elena Sacchini, Teresa Nittoli, Chiara Orsenigo, Matteo Vidali, Patrizia Salice

TL;DR
A study found that increasing fluid intake in healthy children may help lower blood pressure by improving kidney sodium excretion.
Contribution
The study introduces increased fluid intake as a novel, low-cost intervention to potentially prevent rising blood pressure in children.
Findings
Children who drank more fluids had lower systolic, diastolic, and mean blood pressure after 12 months.
The median change in mean blood pressure differed significantly between the fluid and control groups.
Increased fluid intake is proposed to enhance kidney sodium excretion, potentially preventing hypertension.
Abstract
High sodium intake is a key element in the development of hypertension, but strategies aimed at reducing its consumption have had limited impact at a population level. A potential alternative preventive and/or therapeutic opportunity may be represented by increasing kidney sodium excretion. The Salus per Aquam Project is a multicenter, prospective, controlled, randomized study investigating whether, in healthy children, increased fluid intake for 1 year can lower blood pressure. Participants were randomized into 2 groups: one was actively encouraged to increase their water intake, especially during school days, while the other group was used as a control. At baseline and after 1 year, blood pressure was determined using multiple office blood pressure measurements. Urinary electrolytes and creatinine were measured in multiple samples at baseline, during the study period, and at the end…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSodium Intake and Health · Thermoregulation and physiological responses · Blood Pressure and Hypertension Studies
