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Is Salt at Fault? Dietary Salt Consumption and Inflammatory Bowel Disease

Journal

INFLAMMATORY BOWEL DISEASES
Volume 29, Issue 1, Pages 140-150

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/ibd/izac058

Keywords

salt; dietary sodium; exclusive enteral nutrition; chronic inflammation; ultra-processed foods

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Epidemiological trends indicate that diet plays a significant role in the etiopathogenesis of inflammatory bowel diseases. High salt intake, an integral component of ultra-processed foods, has been associated with IBD prevalence. This review explores the link between dietary salt intake and IBD epidemiology, immune homeostasis imbalances, other inflammatory disorders, animal colitis models, and the underrecognized role of salt in diet modification-induced remission of IBD.
Epidemiological trends have led to a growing consensus that diet plays a central role in the etiopathogenesis of inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD). A Western diet high in ultra-processed foods has been associated with an increased prevalence of IBD worldwide. Much attention has focused on components of the Western diet, including the high fat content, lack of fiber, added sugars, and use of additives, such as carrageenan and other emulsifiers. Less attention has been paid to the impact of high salt intake, an integral component of ultra-processed foods, which has increased dramatically in the US diet over the past 50 years. We review a growing body of literature linking the rise in dietary salt intake with the epidemiology of IBD, increased consumption of salt as a component of ultra-processed foods, high salt intake and imbalances in immune homeostasis, the effects of a high-salt diet on other inflammatory disorders, salt's impact on animal colitis models, salt as an underrecognized component in diet modification-induced remission of IBD, and directions for future investigation. Lay Summary Recent studies have shown that high dietary salt intake is proinflammatory and contributes to chronic inflammatory conditions. Combined with investigations demonstrating low-salt exclusive enteral nutrition induced Crohn's remission, salt intake is likely a contributory factor to inflammatory bowel diseases' pathogenesis and severity.

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