The general aim of INTERSALT has been , jointly in London and Chicago, to coordinate an international study on the relation between electrolyte excretion and blood pressure (BP).
Specific aims for the new grant period are to complete data and laboratory analyses and perpare additional manuscripts on findings for the 10,079 persons seen in 52 centers in 32 countries. Main hypotheses are: a) sodium (Na) intaked and BP are positively related, b) potassium (K) is negatively related to BP, anc c) Na/K is positively related to BP. While these hypotheses have been current for years, they have never been tested under a common protocol, with standardized measurement of BP, urinary electrolytes, and possible confounding variables. INTERSALT has conducted such an investigation systematically, following a joint Protocol and Manual of Operations, selecting random samples of 200 men and women age 20-59 in each country. Urine samples were analyzed for Na, K, Cl, Ca, Mg, and creatinine at the study's Central Laboratory in Belgium. Data, entered into the London central computer, were analyzed for the main study hypotheses. Overall, there was a positive relation of NA intake, body mass index, and high alcohol intake with BP, and a negative K-BP relation. Populations with very low Na had virtually no hypertension or rise of BP with age. This application is for partial support for further computer analyses of the wealth of INTERSALT data. Some factors to be studied, both for their independent relation to BP and their role in modifying the electrolyte-BP relation are: weight and height considered separately; urinary Ca and Mg; alcohol; age and sex; possible confounders such as ambient temperature, smoking, the pill, diet changes; social factors (education, etc.). Also to be studied are: intra-and inter-individual variability in electrolyte intake and BP, and effect on electrolyte-BP relationships, subgroups of similar populations (e.g., very low Na); methodologic isues (e.g., electrolytes in casual vs. 24-hr urines and BP; creatinine level as a measure of collection completeness). Partail support is also sought for analyses of 10,000+ frozen specimens for urea, sulfate, and taurine, factors reflecting protein intake and possibly related to BP and the electrolyte-BP association. Partial support to these INTERSALT activities over the next 3 years will permit extensive utilization of the large mass of scientific information already collected to advance knowledge on dietary aspects of the etiology of hypertension, a mass disease in most of the world's populations.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01HL033387-05
Application #
3345255
Study Section
Epidemiology and Disease Control Subcommittee 3 (EDC)
Project Start
1984-12-01
Project End
1991-06-30
Budget Start
1989-07-01
Budget End
1990-06-30
Support Year
5
Fiscal Year
1989
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Northwestern University at Chicago
Department
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
005436803
City
Chicago
State
IL
Country
United States
Zip Code
60611
Stamler, Jeremiah; Chan, Queenie; Daviglus, Martha L et al. (2018) Relation of Dietary Sodium (Salt) to Blood Pressure and Its Possible Modulation by Other Dietary Factors: The INTERMAP Study. Hypertension 71:631-637
Smith, Leon M; Maher, Anthony D; Want, Elizabeth J et al. (2009) Large-scale human metabolic phenotyping and molecular epidemiological studies via 1H NMR spectroscopy of urine: investigation of borate preservation. Anal Chem 81:4847-56
Dyer, A R; Shipley, M; Elliott, P (1994) Urinary electrolyte excretion in 24 hours and blood pressure in the INTERSALT Study. I. Estimates of reliability. The INTERSALT Cooperative Research Group. Am J Epidemiol 139:927-39
Dyer, A R; Elliott, P; Shipley, M (1994) Urinary electrolyte excretion in 24 hours and blood pressure in the INTERSALT Study. II. Estimates of electrolyte-blood pressure associations corrected for regression dilution bias. The INTERSALT Cooperative Research Group. Am J Epidemiol 139:940-51
Dyer, A R; Elliott, P; Shipley, M et al. (1994) Body mass index and associations of sodium and potassium with blood pressure in INTERSALT. Hypertension 23:729-36
Dyer, A R; Elliott, P; Shipley, M (1990) Body mass index versus height and weight in relation to blood pressure. Findings for the 10,079 persons in the INTERSALT Study. Am J Epidemiol 131:589-96
Mancilha-Carvalho, J J; de Oliveira, R; Esposito, R J (1989) Blood pressure and electrolyte excretion in the Yanomamo Indians, an isolated population. J Hum Hypertens 3:309-14
Elliott, P; Stamler, R (1988) Manual of operations for ""INTERSALT"", an international cooperative study on the relation of sodium and potassium to blood pressure. Control Clin Trials 9:1S-117S