Low Sodium Diet Lists

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Low Sodium Diet Lists Please note: • These lists are not exhaustive. • Don't assume that the canned and dry versions of a food will be similar in nutrient content. • Different flavors of the same food can be very different in nutrient content. If these lists specify a flavor, they refer to that flavor only. • These lists were updated October, 2016. The nutrient content of diets can change very often. Check with the manufacturers for up-to-date information frequently! REDUCED SODIUM DIETS - Canine (In order of decreasing sodium content) Nutrients of Concern (/100 kcal) Product kcal/can or cup Na (mg) K (mg) Mg (mg) Protein (gm) Purina EN Naturals (13.4 oz) 456 80 220 20 8.4 Purina DRM Naturals (dry) 418 80 190 30 6.5 Purina HA Vegetarian (dry) 311 80 160 40 5.3 Hill's Science Diet Adult Adv. Fitness Small Bites Lamb & Rice Recipe (dry) 370 78 205 25 5.9 Hill's Science Diet Adult Small & Toy Breed Lamb Meal & Rice Recipe (dry) 391 77 204 25 5.9 Hill's Science Diet Adult Sensitive Stomach & Skin (dry) 366 77 188 29 5.9 Hill's Science Diet Adult Chicken & Barley Entrée (13 oz) 372 76 189 34 6.4 Hill's Science Diet Adult Small & Toy Breed (dry) 364 75 191 37 6.3 Hill's Science Diet Adult Adv. Fitness Original, small bites, or large breed (dry) 363 75 176 29 6.2 Hill's Prescription Diet Derm Defense Canine (dry) 344 74 200 29 5.7 Royal Canin Boxer (dry) 335 73 198 17 6.3 Hill's Science Diet Adult Beef & Barley Entrée (5.8 oz) 176 73 196 24 5.8 Hill's Science Diet Adult Beef & Barley Entrée (13 oz) 395 73 196 24 5.8 Hill's Prescription Diet w/d Canine (dry) 240 72 209 31 5.9 Hill's Healthy Advantage Canine Adult Oral + (dry) 270 71 216 27 6.7 Purina OM (dry) 266 70 280 60 10.3 Royal Canin Mature Consult (13.6 oz) 344 70 220 20 9.9 Royal Canin Mature Consult Small Dog (dry) 328 70 230 50 7.2 Royal Canin Mobility Support JS (dry) 324 70 220 20 6.6 Purina HA chicken flavor (dry) 322 70 160 40 5.4 Hill's Science Diet Adult Healthy Cuisine Chicken, Carrots & Spinach (12.5 oz) 263 68 227 15 6.6 Hill's Science Diet Adult Chicken & Beef Entrée (13 oz) 384 67 221 19 5.9 Hill's Ideal Balance Natural Chicken/Brown Rice Adult (dry) 386 67 182 30 5.3 Hill's Prescription Diet c/d Multicare Canine Chicken & Vegetable Stew (5.5 oz) 116 64 244 11 5.7 Hill's Science Diet Adult Small & Toy Chicken & Barley Entrée (5.8 oz) 161 61 164 34 6.6 Hill's Science Diet Adult Large Breed Lamb Meal & Rice Recipe (dry) 366 61 193 25 5.8 Iams maximum calorie plus (6 oz) 331 57 216 15 8.0 Pro Plan Focus sensitive skin & stomach salmon & rice (dry) 452 50 311 16 7.8 Royal Canin Early Cardiac (dry) 309 50 200 10 6.1 Hill's Prescription Diet n/d (12.7 oz) 537 46 202 14 6.8 AAFCO minimum --- 20 150 15 4.5 *Note the Hill's h/d is not included on this list because of the very low protein content of this diet (3.7-4.1 g/100 kcal) – avoid using it in dogs with cardiac disease unless severe concurrent renal disease is present. 10/2016 .
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  • A Low-Sodium Diet
    Your Guide To: A Low-Sodium Diet Sodium is a necessary part of our diet. It is needed to keep fluids balanced in your body and to aid your nerves and muscles. However, sodium can contribute to high blood pressure, swelling, and over retention of water that can lead to an increased risk of stroke, heart attack and kidney disease. The American Heart Association recommends consuming no more than 1,500 mg of sodium per day. You may not realize how much sodium you consume because foods high in sodium do not always taste salty. And did you know that just one teaspoon of table salt equals more than 2,300 milligrams of sodium? Why is sodium related to cardiovascular risk? Sometimes, your kidneys may not be able to eliminate excess sodium from your body, so the sodium accumulates and retains water in your blood. As your blood volume increases, your heart works harder and your blood pressure rises. This is how excess sodium in your body can lead to heart disease, stroke, kidney disease and congestive heart failure. How much sodium is in what you eat? To manage your sodium intake, learn where the sodium comes from by reading food labels and keeping in mind the listed serving size. The following are the main sources of sodium in a usual diet: • Processed and prepared foods. Nearly 80% of the average person’s salt intake is from packaged, processed, and restaurant foods. Processed foods include bread, frozen dishes, pizza, cold cuts, bacon, cheese, canned soups and fast foods. For example, did you know that one oat-bran bagel contains 532 milligrams of sodium? • Natural sources.
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  • Low Sodium Diet Is Generally Considered Less Than O R Equal to 2 Grams (Or 2,000 Mg) of Sodium Intake Per Day
    What You Need to Know about a Low Sodiu m Diet What is it? A low sodium diet is generally considered less than o r equal to 2 grams (or 2,000 mg) of sodium intake per day. A low sodium diet limits high sodium foods. Effects of high sodium diets When your kidneys aren't functioning properly, they don't filter out sodium, potentially leading to a number of additional health issues including: Increased blood Swollen ankles Puffiness around Shortness of Weight gain from pressure (edema) the eyes breath "water" weight Do's and Don'ts of a low sodium diet Read all food labels carefully for sodium content Have a salt shaker available while you are cooking or at Avoid foods with 500+mg of sodium per serving the dinner table Start slowly with your changes, decreasing sodiu m Use salt-added s ubstitutes for flavoring meals (Mrs. intake as your body adjusts Dash) Limit processed (lunchmeat ) and canned foods Take m edications with a high sodium contant (i.e. Alka (soups/vegetables) Seltzer or Sodium Bicarbonate) Be mindful of the "s alty six" from the American Heart Substitute low sodium salt with regular salt Association: (1) breads/rolls/bagels/flour tortilla/wraps, (2) cold cuts & cured meats, (3) pizza, (4) poultry or meats that are injected with sodium, (5) soup, (6) sandwiches Low Sodium Diet Details Eat This Limit/Avoid This Limit to no more than 2-3 servings per week Fresh/frozen meats (beef, poultry, fish, lamb) Smoked, cured, sal ted or Eggs or egg substit ute canned meats including Low sodium peanut bu tter but not limited to: Unsalted
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  • FUTURE of FOOD a Lighthouse for Future Living, Today Context + People and Market Insights + Emerging Innovations
    FUTURE OF FOOD A Lighthouse for future living, today Context + people and market insights + emerging innovations Home FUTURE OF FOOD | 01 FOREWORD: CREATING THE FUTURE WE WANT If we are to create a world in which 9 billion to spend. That is the reality of the world today. people live well within planetary boundaries, People don’t tend to aspire to less. “ WBCSD is committed to creating a then we need to understand why we live sustainable world – one where 9 billion Nonetheless, we believe that we can work the way we do today. We must understand people can live well, within planetary within this reality – that there are huge the world as it is, if we are to create a more boundaries. This won’t be achieved opportunities available, for business all over sustainable future. through technology alone – it is going the world, and for sustainable development, The cliché is true: we live in a fast-changing in designing solutions for the world as it is. to involve changing the way we live. And world. Globally, people are both choosing, and that’s a good thing – human history is an This “Future of” series from WBCSD aims to having, to adapt their lifestyles accordingly. endless journey of change for the better. provide a perspective that helps to uncover While no-one wants to live unsustainably, and Forward-looking companies are exploring these opportunities. We have done this by many would like to live more sustainably, living how we can make sustainable living looking at the way people need and want to a sustainable lifestyle isn’t a priority for most both possible and desirable, creating live around the world today, before imagining people around the world.
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  • Low Sodium Diet: Heart Failure Control Recommended Limit
    Low Sodium Diet: Heart Failure Control Recommended Limit: Patients with heart failure should limit sodium intake to less than 2,000 milligrams per day (less than one teaspoon per day). Limiting sodium is one of the most important things that people with heart failure can do. Sodium makes the body hold on to fluid, cause weight gain, worsen symptoms like swelling and shortness of breath, and increase blood pressure. All of these things cause the heart to work harder. People with heart failure do not need to put this extra strain on their hearts. Basic Sodium Guidelines 1 teaspoon of table salt = 2,300 mgs sodium Recommended = 2,000 mgs sodium or less/day For a diet in which you consume 2,000 mg of sodium per day, a sample plan might involve eating 500 mg at breakfast, 150 mg for snacks twice daily, 600 mg for lunch, and 600 mg for dinner. • Use fresh ingredients and/or foods with no salt added. • For favorite recipes, you may need to use other ingredients and delete or decrease the salt added. Salt can be removed from any recipe except from those containing yeast. • Try orange or pineapple juice as a base for meat marinades. • Avoid convenience foods such as canned soups, entrees, vegetables, pasta and rice mixes, frozen dinners, instant cereal and puddings, and gravy sauce mixes. • Select frozen entrees that contain 500 mg or less of sodium. However, limit to one of these frozen entrees per day. Check the Nutrition Facts label on the package for sodium content. • Use fresh, frozen, no added salt canned vegetables, or canned vegetables that have been rinsed before they are prepared.
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  • Special Diets
    SPECIAL DIETS Details & Specifications BLAND MEALS Low sugar menus includes preparations low in sugars A bland diet is available for those who suffer from disorders and simple carbohydrates such as: foods high in fibre, of the stomach and /or the digestive tract. Bland meals are wholegrain, no starchy vegetables, beans, lean proteins, low based on foods that are well cooked, soft and simple to fat dairy products, fresh fruit and nuts. Low sugar desserts digest, low in fibre and very mild spices; and they do not are available and sweetened using natural sugar alternatives include alcohol and drinks with caffeine in them. or sugar substitutes. All Bland Meals are carefully seasoned with light dressing It does NOT contain any kind of refined sugar and high and cooked using a simple method which includes baking, sugar preparations. grilling, steaming, boiling and poaching in order to minimize the amount of fat. KOSHER MEALS* Kosher Meals are prepared and serviced with Jewish Bland menus include: starchy food (white bread, well dietary guidelines containing one or more of the following cooked pasta and steamed rice, mashed potato, sweet ingredients: Kosher certified fresh or frozen food items potato and corn flour puree) boiled, grilled and steamed including dairy products and wine, and kosher animal vegetables, lean meat cuts, white fish, poached egg, low fat protein (duck, chicken, turkey, tuna, salmon, herring, beef, dairy products and fresh fruits. lamb and veal). It does NOT contain: pork, seafood, and shellfish such as shrimps, crabs, mussels, and lobsters. It It does NOT contain fried, high fat and very spicy MAY include non-kosher fruits, vegetables and cereals and preparations, wholegrain and unrefined breads, high fibre non-kosher dairy products.
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  • Low Potassium Low Sodium Diet Tips
    Low Potassium Low Sodium Diet Tips The right amount of sodium and potassium in your diet is important for your heart. Your healthcare provider has prescribed low sodium and low potassium diet for you. Daily sodium goal: ___________ mg or less Daily potassium goal: ___________ mg or less Sodium can cause your body to retain water, which puts a burden on your heart. Sodium is found in many forms. Avoiding salt is important. Most of our sodium intake comes from processed, packaged and restaurant foods, so limiting these foods is important. Aim for 500-600 mg sodium per meal. Don’t forget to count sodium from snacks. Refer to the handouts provided on following a low sodium diet. Potassium is a mineral found in most foods and is important for heart health. In some conditions, the levels of potassium can become higher than normal. Eating a lower potassium diet can help to keep your potassium levels in a healthy range. Use the lists on the next page to identify higher potassium foods and lower potassium foods. If potassium is listed on a food label, look for products that have 6% or less potassium. Per serving, these foods fall into the lower potassium range. Be aware that potassium is not always listed on a food label. It does not mean that potassium is not in that food – it’s just not listed on the label. For foods not listed, you can often look up potassium amounts at www.myfitnesspal.com or www.calorieking.com. Some kidney health websites (www.kidneycommunitykitchen.ca or www.davita.com) are good resources to find low potassium, low sodium recipes.
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  • 523 | MAY 9, 2014 Food & Beverage Litigation UPDATE
    ISSUE 523 | MAY 9, 2014 FOOD & BEVERAGE LITIGATION UPDATE CONTENTS Legislation, Regulations and Standards Schumer Calls for FDA Ban on Powdered Alcohol ......................1 LEGISLATION, REGULATIONS AND STANDARDS USDA Solicits Feedback for New Maple Syrup Grading System ...........1 FSIS Issues Final Rule for Meat and Schumer Calls for FDA Ban on Powdered Alcohol Poultry Products ........................2 FDA Drafts Guidance on Allergens ......3 Dubbing powdered alcohol “the Kool-Aid of teen binge drinking,” Sen. Charles EFSA Addresses Dietary Iodine ..........3 Schumer (D-N.Y.) has called on the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) EFSA Considers Reduction of Zinc to supersede the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau (TTB) by banning in Animal Feed ..........................3 EFSA Issues Opinion on Bacillus a product known as Palcohol® before it reaches store shelves. Created by Species in Animal Feed .................4 Lipsmark, LLC, Palcohol® first attracted media attention when TTB granted and ASA Dismisses Complaint Against then temporarily rescinded approval for its labels, citing a technical issue with Cereal Ads Shown in Cinema ............4 the amount of powdered alcohol in each package. Additional details about FSANZ IDs Exposures to Acrylamide and Aluminum .........................5 Palcohol® appear in Issue 521 of this Update. OEHHA Launches Database .............6 Now Schumer has written a May 5, 2014, letter to FDA Commissioner Litigation Margaret Hamburg, asking the agency to work with TTB “to assess the poten- Court Dismisses Most Claims Against tial public health concerns that arise by combining this product with food Hershey ................................6 and beverages.” Pointing to a 1976 district court ruling and a memorandum of Court Transfers Venue of 4-MEI Suit .....6 Texas Intervenes in Breweries’ understanding that saddled both agencies with the responsibility to regulate Alamo Trademark Dispute ..............7 alcohol, Schumer has urged FDA to investigate Palcohol® before its release, “to Former Peanut Corp.
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  • Low Sodium Diet Foods List
    LOW SODIUM DIET FOODS LIST Low sodium foods are abundant and many are natural, organic, and can be easily found. They can be found in every food group and there are many different possibilities for a low sodium meal. BREADS, CEREALS, RICE AND PASTA VEGETABLES Most rice and pastas are very low in As with fruits, all fresh vegetables are sodium. Compare labels to find products low in sodium. Vegetables may also be with less salt and don’t add salt when frozen of canned if, like fruits, they do cooking. The following are also all viable not contain sauces. low-sodium food items: • Broccoli • Whole grain bread • Cabbage • Granola • Cauliflower • Puffed rice • Chickpeas • Rolled oats • Cucumber • Shredded wheats • Green peppers • Unsalted popcorn • Lima beans • Bread, bagels, English muffins, • Sweet potatoes crackers, or bread sticks without salted tops PROTEIN Choose fresh meats when possible. FRUITS Some fresh meat has added sodium, so Any kind of fruit or fruit juice (fresh, always check the label. frozen, or canned) is low in sodium if it • 6 ounces daily of any fresh or does not contain sauces. Fruits frozen beef, veal, lamb, pork, particularly low in sodium include: poultry, and fish without salt or • Apples sodium in the preparation and • Bananas without skin. • Blackberries • Low sodium, water packed tuna • Cherries or salmon • Peaches • Eggs and egg substitutes • Pears • Unsalted nuts and seeds • Raspberries • Low sodium nut butter • Watermelons Right at Home 8260 Willow Oaks Corporate Drive Ste. 120 | Fairfax, VA 22031 | (703) 538-4584 www.rightathomenova.com FATS CONDIMENTS AND EXTRAS • Olive oil and other cooking oils Choose condiments that are low in • Low sodium mayonnaise sodium or have no sodium at all, and try • Unsalted butter or margarine seasonings instead of salt to flavor food.
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  • HEART FAILURE: Following a Low Sodium Diet •• Have No More Than 2,000 Mg of Sodium Each Day When Dining Out: from Food and Drink Or As Prescribed by Your Doctor
    HEART FAILURE: Following a Low Sodium Diet • Have no more than 2,000 mg of sodium each day When dining out: from food and drink or as prescribed by your doctor. • Ask that you order be prepared without added salt • It is good to select foods with no more than 140 mg or MSG (mono-sodium glutamate). of sodium per serving. Foods with more than 300 mg • Order baked, broiled, grilled, or steamed foods of sodium per serving may not fit into a reduced- without sauces, butter, breading, and gravies. sodium meal plan. • Use salad dressings sparingly, as most are high in salt. • Do not add salt to your food during cooking or at • Avoid soups, broths, salted crackers or rolls, pickles, the table. cheese, olives, seasoned croutons, and cured meats. • Season without salt – use fresh or dried herbs, spices, • The heart symbol found on the menu at some commercial spice blends (such as Mrs. Dash ® salt restaurants may mean the item is low fat and/or free seasoning) or lemon juice to season foods. cholesterol. These items may often be higher • Read food labels carefully – Ingredients to avoid include in sodium. When choosing a low-fat, low-cholesterol salt, sodium, sodium chloride, monosodium glutamate meal in a restaurant, ask that it is served with as (MSG), brine, broth, corned, pickled, and smoked. little salt content as possible. When purchasing convenient foods, buy low sodium • Some helpful definitions are the following: varieties. Choose frozen dinners with less than • Sodium Free: Less than 5 mg per serving 300 mg per serving.
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  • Low-Sodium Eating
    Low-Sodium Eating Eating too much salt (or sodium) can make your body retain too much fluid. Processed, canned, packaged, and frozen foods are often high in sodium. Use the following tips and the table below to lower your sodium intake. To follow a low-sodium diet: Do not add salt when cooking or after cooking. o 1 teaspoon salt = 2,400 mg sodium Remove the salt shaker from the dinner table. Read food labels to find foods with less sodium. Choose “low-sodium” or “no salt added” foods. Avoid fast foods and food prepared in restaurants. Use salt substitutes only as allowed by your doctor. Limit your daily sodium intake to ______________ mg per day. FOOD CHOOSE AVOID GROUP Fresh, frozen, or canned fruit Canned or bottled vegetables FRUITS AND Fruit juice Pickled vegetables VEGETABLES Fresh or frozen vegetables Vegetable juice Canned vegetables (without added Tomato, spaghetti, pizza sauce salt) Canned tomatoes, tomato sauce, tomato paste (without added salt) Fresh meat, fish, chicken, turkey Corned beef MEATS AND Low-sodium canned tuna Pepperoni OTHER Tofu Meat jerky PROTEINS Eggs Bacon, sausage, Canadian bacon Unsalted nuts Hot dogs, Spam®, Vienna sausage Peanut butter (without added salt) Lunch meats (such as ham, bologna, Dried beans, canned beans salami, turkey, roast beef) (without added salt) Bacon fat, salt pork Low-sodium lunch meats Sardines, anchovies, canned tuna Salted nuts Canned beans, baked beans, refried beans Clinical Dietitians, Food & Nutrition Services, UC Davis Medical Center (3/14) 2014 The Regents of the University
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  • Effect of Dose and Duration of Reduction in Dietary Sodium on BMJ: First Published As 10.1136/Bmj.M315 on 24 February 2020
    RESEARCH Effect of dose and duration of reduction in dietary sodium on BMJ: first published as 10.1136/bmj.m315 on 24 February 2020. Downloaded from blood pressure levels: systematic review and meta-analysis of randomised trials Liping Huang,1,2 Kathy Trieu,2 Sohei Yoshimura,2,3 Bruce Neal,2,4 Mark Woodward,2,5 Norm R C Campbell,6 Qiang Li,2 Daniel T Lackland,7 Alexander A Leung,6 Cheryl A M Anderson,8 Graham A MacGregor,9 Feng J He9 For numbered affiliations see ABSTRACT 2.07 mm Hg (1.67 to 2.48, P<0.001), respectively. end of the article. OBJECTIVE Each 50 mmol reduction in 24 hour sodium excretion Correspondence to: F J He To examine the dose-response relation between was associated with a 1.10 mm Hg (0.66 to 1.54; [email protected] reduction in dietary sodium and blood pressure P<0.001) reduction in SBP and a 0.33 mm Hg (0.04 ORCID 0000-0003-2807-4119) change and to explore the impact of intervention to 0.63; P=0.03) reduction in DBP. Reductions in Additional material is published online only. To view please visit duration. blood pressure were observed in diverse population the journal online. DESIGN subsets examined, including hypertensive and non- Cite this as: BMJ 2020;368:m315 Systematic review and meta-analysis following hypertensive individuals. For the same reduction in 24 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.m315 PRISMA guidelines. hour urinary sodium there was greater SBP reduction Accepted: 8 January 2020 in older people, non-white populations, and those DATA SOURCES with higher baseline SBP levels.
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  • Guideline: Sodium Intake for Adults and Children
    Guideline: Sodium intake for adults and children WHO| Guideline i Sodium intake for adults and children Guideline: Sodium intake for adults and children WHO| Guideline iii Sodium intake for adults and children WHO Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data Guideline1: Sodium intake for adults and children. 1.Sodium, Dietary. 2.Chronic disease – prevention and control. 3.Guideline. I.World Health Organization. ISBN 978 92 4 150483 6 (NLM classification:WB 424) © World Health Organization, 2012 All rights reserved. Publications of the World Health Organization are available on the WHO web site (www.who.int) or can be purchased from WHO Press, World Health Organization, 20 Avenue Appia, 1211 Geneva 27, Switzerland (tel.: +41 22 791 3264; fax: +41 22 791 4857; e-mail: [email protected]). Requests for permission to reproduce or translate WHO publications – whether for sale or for noncommercial distribution – should be addressed to WHO Press through the WHO web site (http://www.who.int/about/licensing/copyright_form/en/index.html). The designations employed and the presentation of the material in this publication do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the World Health Organization concerning the legal status of any country, territory, city or area or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries. Dotted lines on maps represent approximate border lines for which there may not yet be full agreement. The mention of specific companies or of certain manufacturers’ products does not imply that they are endorsed or recommended by the World Health Organization in preference to others of a similar nature that are not mentioned.
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