12 results on '"Arcand, JoAnne"'
Search Results
2. The science of salt: A regularly updated systematic review of salt and health outcomes (December 2015-March 2016).
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Wong, Michelle M. Y., Arcand, JoAnne, Leung, Alexander A., Thout, Sudhir Raj, Campbell, Norm R. C., and Webster, Jacqui
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HYPERTENSION epidemiology , *OBESITY complications , *BLOOD pressure , *CARDIOVASCULAR diseases , *FATTY liver , *HYPERTENSION , *KIDNEY diseases , *OBESITY , *SALT , *SALT-free diet , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *DISEASE incidence , *DISEASE prevalence , *DISEASE complications - Abstract
The purpose of this review was to identify, summarize, and critically appraise studies on dietary salt relating to health outcomes that were published from December 2015 to March 2016. The search strategy was adapted from a previous systematic review on dietary salt and health. Overall, 13 studies were included in the review: one study assessed cardiovascular events, nine studies assessed prevalence or incidence of blood pressure or hypertension, one study assessed kidney disease, and two studies assessed other health outcomes (obesity and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease). Four studies were selected for detailed appraisal and commentary. One study met the minimum methodologic criteria and found an increased risk associated with lower sodium intake in patients with heart failure. All other studies identified in this review demonstrated positive associations between dietary salt and adverse health outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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3. The Science of Salt: A Regularly Updated Systematic Review of Salt and Health Outcomes (August to November 2015).
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Wong, Michelle M.Y., Arcand, JoAnne, Leung, Alexander A., Raj, Thout Sudhir, Trieu, Kathy, Santos, Joseph Alvin, and Campbell, Norm R.C.
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HYPERTENSION epidemiology , *BODY weight , *CARDIOVASCULAR diseases , *KIDNEY diseases , *META-analysis , *NUTRITIONAL assessment , *SALT - Abstract
The purpose of this review was to systematically identify, summarize, and critically appraise studies on dietary salt relating to health outcomes that were published from August to November 2015. The search strategy was adapted from a previous systematic review on dietary salt and health. Overall, 15 studies were included in the review: one study assessed cardiovascular events, five studies assessed blood pressure or hypertension incidence, six studies assessed surrogate outcomes for cardiovascular or kidney diseases, and three studies assessed other outcomes (age-related cataracts, rheumatoid arthritis, and bone mineral density, respectively). Four studies were selected for detailed appraisal and commentary. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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4. Examination of food industry progress in reducing the sodium content of packaged foods in Canada: 2010 to 2013.
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Arcand, JoAnne, Jefferson, Katherine, Schermel, Alyssa, Shah, Ferdeela, Trang, Susan, Kutlesa, Daniela, Lou, Wendy, and L'Abbe, Mary R.
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FOOD industry , *FOOD packaging , *FOOD supply , *POLICY sciences , *RESEARCH funding , *SALT , *SALT-free diet , *TIME , *CROSS-sectional method , *EVALUATION - Abstract
In 2010, as part of a national sodium reduction strategy, Canada published sodium reduction benchmark targets for packaged foods; however, no evaluation of this policy has occurred. The objective was to evaluate changes in the sodium content of packaged foods, identify categories reduced in sodium, and determine the proportion meeting Health Canada's sodium reduction benchmarks. This was a cross-sectional analysis of Canadian packaged foods in 2010 and 2013 ( n = 10 487 and n = 15 394, respectively). Sodium content was obtained from the Nutrition Facts table. Overall, 16.2% of food categories had significantly reduced sodium levels. The greatest shifts in the distribution of sodium within food categories occurred in imitation seafood (mean ± SD, mg/100 g; 602 ± 50 to 444 ± 81, 26.2%, p = 0.002), condiments (1309 ± 790 to 1048 ± 620, 19.9%, p = 0.005), breakfast cereals (375 ± 26 to 301 ± 242, 19.7%, p = 0.001), canned vegetables/legumes (269 ± 156 to 217 ± 180, 19.3%, p < 0.001), plain chips (462 ± 196 to 376 ± 198, 18.6% p = 0.004), hot cereals (453 ± 141 to 385 ± 155, 15.0%, p = 0.011), meat analogues (612 ± 226 to 524 ± 177, 14.4%, p = 0.003), canned condensed soup (291 ± 62 to 250 ± 57, 14.1%, p = 0.003), and sausages and wieners (912 ± 219 to 814 ± 195, 10.7%, p = 0.012). The proportion of foods meeting at least 1 of the 3 phases of the sodium reduction benchmark targets slightly increased (51.4% to 58.2%) and the proportion exceeding maximum benchmark levels decreased (25.2% to 20.8%). These data provide a critical evaluation of changes in sodium levels in the Canadian food supply. Although progress in reducing sodium in packaged foods is evident, the food industry needs to continue efforts in reducing the sodium in the foods they produce. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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5. Science of Salt: A regularly updated systematic review of salt and health outcomes studies (April to October 2018).
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McLean, Rachael M., Petersen, Kristina S., Arcand, JoAnne, Malta, Daniela, Rae, Sarah, Thout, Sudhir Raj, Trieu, Kathy, Johnson, Claire, and Campbell, Norman R. C.
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The Science of Salt reviews identify, summarize, and critically appraise published studies on dietary salt and health outcomes according to pre-specified methods. This review covers the period April 3 to October 30, 2018. Here, nineteen studies that fit pre-specified criteria for review and summary are included. Three of these, one prospective cohort study, one randomized controlled trial, and a post hoc analysis of the Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension (DASH) sodium trial fulfilled the quality criteria for detailed critical appraisal, including risk of bias assessment, and commentary. Two trials demonstrated a positive association between salt intake and blood pressure. In a cohort of older Italians, increased risk of total mortality was observed with salt intake less than ~16 g/d (6300 mg sodium/d) at baseline; no association existed for incident cardiovascular disease (CVD) or CVD mortality. The paucity of published studies which met our criteria for methodological quality is of concern. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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6. Sodium-Reduced Meat and Poultry Products Contain a Significant Amount of Potassium from Food Additives.
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Parpia, Arti Sharma, Goldstein, Marc B., Arcand, JoAnne, Cho, France, L’Abbé, Mary R., and Darling, Pauline B.
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CONFIDENCE intervals , *FOOD chemistry , *FOOD labeling , *FOOD additives , *MEAT , *PHOSPHORUS , *POTASSIUM , *PROBABILITY theory , *DIETARY proteins , *SALT , *SALT-free diet , *T-test (Statistics) , *DATA analysis , *CROSS-sectional method , *NUTRITIONAL value , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Background Sodium-reduced packaged food products are increasingly available to consumers; however, it is not clear whether they are suitable for inclusion in a potassium-reduced diet. For individuals with impaired renal potassium excretion caused by chronic kidney disease and for those taking certain medications that interfere with the rennin-angiotensin aldosterone axis, the need to limit dietary potassium is important in view of the risk for development of hyperkalemia and fatal cardiac arrhythmias. Objective The primary objective of this study was to determine the impact of the reduction of sodium in packaged meat and poultry products (MPPs) on the content of potassium and phosphorus from food additives. Design This was a cross-sectional study comparing chemically analyzed MPPs (n=38, n=19 original, n=19 sodium-reduced), selected from the top three grocery chains in Canada, based on market share sales. All MPPs with a package label containing a reduced sodium content claim together with their non-sodium-reduced packaged MPP counterparts were selected for analysis. The protein, sodium, phosphorus, and potassium contents of sodium-reduced MPPs and the non-sodium-reduced (original) MPP counterparts were chemically analyzed according to the Association of Analytical Communities official methods 992.15 and 984.27 and compared by using a paired t test. The frequency of phosphorus and potassium additives appearing on the product labels' ingredient lists were compared between groups by using McNemar’s test. Results Sodium-reduced MPPs (n=19) contained 44% more potassium (mg/100 g) than their non-sodium-reduced counterparts (n=19) (mean difference [95% CI): 184 [90-279]; P =0.001). The potassium content of sodium-reduced MPPs varied widely and ranged from 210 to 1,500 mg/100 g. Potassium-containing additives were found on the ingredient list in 63% of the sodium-reduced products and 26% of the non–sodium-reduced products ( P =0.02). Sodium-reduced MPPs contained 38% less sodium (mg/100 g) than their non–sodium-reduced counterparts (mean difference [95% CI]: 486 [334-638]; P <0.001). The amounts of phosphorus and protein, as well as the frequency of phosphorus additives appearing on the product label ingredient list, did not significantly differ between the two groups. Conclusions Potassium additives are frequently added to sodium-reduced MPPs in amounts that significantly contribute to the potassium load for patients with impaired renal handling of potassium caused by chronic kidney disease and certain medications. Patients requiring potassium restriction should be counseled to be cautious regarding the potassium content of sodium-reduced MPPs and encouraged to make food choices accordingly. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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7. Further evidence that methods based on spot urine samples should not be used to examine sodium‐disease relationships from the Science of Salt: A regularly updated systematic review of salt and health outcomes (November 2018 to August 2019).
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Petersen, Kristina S., Malta, Daniela, Rae, Sarah, Dash, Sarah, Webster, Jacqui, McLean, Rachael, Thout, Sudhir Raj, Campbell, Norm R. C., and Arcand, JoAnne
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The aim of this eighth Science of Salt outcomes review is to identify, summarize, and critically appraise studies on dietary sodium and health outcomes published between November 1, 2018, and August 31, 2019, to extend this series published in the Journal since 2016. The standardized Science of Salt search strategy was conducted. Studies were screened based on a priori defined criteria to identify publications eligible for detailed critical appraisal. The search strategy resulted in 2621 citations with 27 studies on dietary sodium and health outcomes identified. Two studies met the criteria for detailed critical appraisal and commentary. We report more evidence that high sodium intake has detrimental health effects. A post hoc analysis of the Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension (DASH) sodium trial showed that lightheadedness occurred at a greater frequency with a high sodium DASH diet compared to a low sodium DASH diet. In addition, evidence from a post‐trial analysis of the Trials of Hypertension (TOHP) I and II cohorts showed that estimates of sodium intake from methods based on spot urine samples are inaccurate and this method alters the linearity of the sodium‐mortality association. Compared to measurement of 24‐hour sodium excretion using three to seven 24‐hour urine collections, estimation of average 24‐hour sodium excretion with the Kawasaki equation appeared to change the mortality association from linear to J‐shaped. Only two high‐quality studies were identified during the review period, both were secondary analyses of previously conducted trials, highlighting the lack of new methodologically sound studies examining sodium and health outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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8. The Science of Salt: A global review on changes in sodium levels in foods.
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Santos, Joseph Alvin, Sparks, Emalie, Thout, Sudhir Raj, McKenzie, Briar, Trieu, Kathy, Hoek, Annet, Johnson, Claire, McLean, Rachael, Arcand, JoAnne, Campbell, Norman R. C., and Webster, Jacqui
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This review aims to summarize and synthesize studies reporting on changes in sodium levels in packaged food products, restaurant foods, and hospital or school meals, as a result of salt reduction interventions. Studies were extracted from those published in the Science of Salt Weekly between June 2013 and February 2018. Twenty-four studies were identified: 17 assessed the changes in packaged foods, four in restaurant foods, two in hospital or school meals, and one in both packaged and restaurant foods. Three types of interventions were evaluated as part of the studies: voluntary reductions (including targets), labeling, and interventions in institutional settings. Decreases in sodium were observed in all studies (n = 8) that included the same packaged foods matched at two time points, and in the studies carried out in hospitals and schools. However, there was little to no change in mean sodium levels in restaurant foods. The pooled analysis of change in sodium levels in packaged foods showed a decrease in sodium in unmatched food products (-36 mg/100 g, 95% CI -51 to -20 mg/100 g) and in five food categories-breakfast cereals, breads, processed meats, crisps and snacks, and soups. Twenty-two of the 24 studies were from high-income countries, limiting the applicability of the findings to lower resource settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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9. High sodium intake increases blood pressure and risk of kidney disease. From the Science of Salt: A regularly updated systematic review of salt and health outcomes (August 2016 to March 2017).
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Malta, Daniela, Petersen, Kristina S., Johnson, Claire, Trieu, Kathy, Rae, Sarah, Jefferson, Katherine, Santos, Joseph Alvin, Wong, Michelle M. Y., Raj, Thout Sudhir, Webster, Jacqui, Campbell, Norm R. C., and Arcand, JoAnne
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KIDNEY disease treatments , *HYPERTENSION epidemiology , *BLOOD pressure , *CARDIOVASCULAR diseases , *HEALTH status indicators , *HYPERTENSION , *KIDNEY diseases , *META-analysis , *QUALITY of life , *SALT , *SALT-free diet , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *CROSS-sectional method , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *CASE-control method , *DISEASE complications ,CARDIOVASCULAR disease related mortality - Abstract
The purpose of this review was to identify, summarize, and critically appraise studies on dietary salt and health outcomes that were published from August 2016 to March 2017. The search strategy was adapted from a previous systematic review on dietary salt and health. Studies that meet standards for methodological quality criteria and eligible health outcomes are reported in detailed critical appraisals. Overall, 47 studies were identified and are summarized in this review. Two studies assessed all-cause or disease-specific mortality outcomes, eight studies assessed morbidity reduction-related outcomes, three studies assessed outcomes related to symptoms/quality of life/functional status, 25 studies assessed blood pressure (BP) outcomes and other clinically relevant surrogate outcomes, and nine studies assessed physiologic surrogate outcomes. Eight of these studies met the criteria for outcomes and methodological quality and underwent detailed critical appraisals and commentary. Five of these studies found adverse effects of salt intake on health outcomes (BP; death due to kidney disease and initiation of dialysis; total kidney volume and composite of kidney function; composite of cardiovascular disease (CVD) events including, and risk of mortality); one study reported the benefits of salt restriction in chronic BP and two studies reported neutral results (BP and risk of CKD). Overall, these articles confirm the negative effects of excessive sodium intake on health outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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10. Percentage of ingested sodium excreted in 24-hour urine collections: A systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Lucko, Aaron M., Doktorchik, Chelsea, Woodward, Mark, Cogswell, Mary, Neal, Bruce, Rabi, Doreen, Anderson, Cheryl, He, Feng J., MacGregor, Graham A., L'Abbe, Mary, Arcand, JoAnne, Whelton, Paul K., McLean, Rachael, Campbell, Norm R. C., the TRUE Consortium, L'Abbe, Mary, and TRUE Consortium
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DIET , *META-analysis , *SALT , *SYSTEMATIC reviews ,URINE collection & preservation - Published
- 2018
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11. The Science of Salt: A regularly updated systematic review of the implementation of salt reduction interventions (March-August 2016).
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Santos, Joseph Alvin, Trieu, Kathy, Raj, Thout Sudhir, Arcand, JoAnne, Johnson, Claire, Webster, Jacqui, and McLean, Rachael
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BREAD , *SODIUM content of food , *HEALTH planning , *HYPERTENSION , *SALT , *SALT-free diet , *SYSTEMATIC reviews ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
This review aims to identify, summarize, and appraise studies reporting on the implementation of salt reduction interventions that were published between March and August 2016. Overall, 40 studies were included: four studies evaluated the impact of salt reduction interventions, while 36 studies were identified as relevant to the design, assessment, and implementation of salt reduction strategies. Detailed appraisal and commentary were undertaken on the four studies that measured the impact of the interventions. Among them, different evaluation approaches were adopted; however, all demonstrated positive health outcomes relating to dietary salt reduction. Three of the four studies measured sodium in breads and provided consistent evidence that sodium reduction in breads is feasible and different intervention options are available. None of the studies were conducted in low- or lower middle-income countries, which stresses the need for more resources and research support for the implementation of salt reduction interventions in these countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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12. The Science of Salt: A Systematic Review of Quality Clinical Salt Outcome Studies June 2014 to May 2015.
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Johnson, Claire, Raj, Thout Sudhir, Trieu, Kathy, Arcand, JoAnne, Wong, Michelle M.Y., McLean, Rachael, Leung, Alexander, Campbell, Norm R.C., and Webster, Jacqui
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BLOOD pressure , *BLOOD pressure measurement , *CLINICAL trials , *HEADACHE , *META-analysis , *RISK assessment , *SALT , *SYSTEMATIC reviews ,CARDIOVASCULAR disease related mortality - Abstract
Studies identified from an updated systematic review (from June 2014 to May 2015) on the impact of dietary salt intake on clinical and population health are reviewed. Randomized controlled trials, cohort studies, and meta-analyses of these study types on the effect of sodium intake on blood pressure, or any substantive adverse health outcomes were identified from MEDLINE searches and quality indicators were used to select studies that were relevant to clinical and public health. From 6920 studies identified in the literature search, 144 studies were selected for review, of which only three (n=233,680) met inclusion criteria. Between them, the three studies demonstrated a harmful association between excess dietary salt and all-cause mortality, noncardiovascular and cardiovascular disease mortality, and headache. None of the included studies found harm from lowering dietary salt. The findings of this systematic review are consistent with the large body of research supportive of efforts to reduce population salt intake and congruent with our last annual review from June 2013 to May 2014. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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