Updated
Updated · Prevention Magazine · May 20
Study Links High Salt Intake to 6-Year Memory Decline in Older Men
Updated
Updated · Prevention Magazine · May 20

Study Links High Salt Intake to 6-Year Memory Decline in Older Men

1 articles · Updated · Prevention Magazine · May 20
  • More than 1,200 older Australian adults tracked for six years showed no clear whole-group cognitive effect, but men with higher salt intake had steeper declines in episodic recall.
  • Neuropsychological tests given every 18 months pointed to episodic memory—a function tied to the hippocampus and often affected early in Alzheimer’s disease.
  • Researchers and clinicians said excess sodium may worsen blood pressure, inflammation and small-vessel damage, reducing blood flow in memory-related brain regions; men in the study also consumed more salt and had higher diastolic pressure.
  • The study was observational and relied on food questionnaires that did not capture salt added at the table or during cooking, so it cannot prove causation.
  • WHO recommends adults stay below 2,000 milligrams of sodium a day, with experts urging more fresh foods, fewer packaged products and lower-sodium choices.
Why might a high-salt diet damage memory in older men but not women?
Beyond just cutting salt, what is the optimal brain-protective diet for aging adults?