New research links higher dietary sodium to a faster drop in a specific kind of memory among older men, outlines why blood pressure might matter, and offers practical ideas to cut back on salt-heavy processed foods. The study tracked adults 60 and older over several years and raises questions about how routine sodium consumption could influence brain health without proving cause and effect.
A team in Australia followed more than 1,200 people aged 60 and up for six years and compared baseline sodium intake to cognitive changes over time. They focused on “episodic recall,” a form of memory that helps you remember personal experiences and specific events, and analyzed performance shifts across the study period. The link between higher sodium and quicker decline surfaced in men but not in women, which drew researchers into probing why the sexes differed.
“Episodic recall is a type of memory used to recall personal experiences and specific events from one’s past, such as where you parked your car or your first day of school,” according to study author Samantha Gardener, Ph.D., a research fellow in neuroscience at the School of Medical and Health Sciences at Edith Cowan University in Western Australia. The gender split puzzled the team because men in the sample also reported higher sodium intake overall. In addition, men tended to have higher diastolic blood pressure, which could help explain the pattern.
“We did not see any relationship between the amount of sodium consumed and memory decline in females,” Gardener told Fox News Digital. That absence of effect among women suggests the association is not universal and may depend on other physiological or lifestyle variables. The investigators point to elevated blood pressure as a plausible mediator between salt and brain health.
“Elevated blood pressure is a recognized risk factor for cardiovascular disease and Alzheimer’s disease, and sodium plays a key role in blood pressure regulation,” she said. Blood pressure affects small blood vessels and circulation in the brain, which in turn can influence cognition over time. Tracking how sodium influences vascular health could clarify whether lowering intake would shift cognitive trajectories.
“This study adds to the evidence that high-sodium diets may affect more than blood pressure,” observed a registered dietitian who commented on the findings. She also warned readers that the research was observational, so it shows association rather than proof. “While excess sodium may impact cognition, it is important to note that this was a longitudinal observational study, meaning it can show an association but cannot rule out other potential factors like overall diet quality, physical activity or other comorbidities,” the dietitian noted.
Methodological limits matter: sodium intake was measured with a food frequency questionnaire at the start of the study, so changes over time were not captured and added salt used during cooking or at the table was not counted. The participant pool was mainly Caucasian, which constrains how broadly the results can be generalized. Those caveats mean the findings are meaningful but preliminary, and researchers say more targeted work is required to untangle mechanisms.
Typical sodium sources remain the same: processed and prepared foods contribute the lion’s share, and familiar culprits include pizza, sandwiches, deli meats, salty snacks, canned goods, dressings, cheeses and many condiments. “Replacing one processed snack – such as beef jerky, olives, salted nuts, pretzels and bagged potato or corn chips – with an unprocessed snack is a great place to start,” advised a registered dietitian. “Replacing a few fast food meals with food prepared at home is also an excellent way to reduce your sodium intake by thousands of milligrams,” she added.
Practical steps include reading nutrition labels, choosing lower-sodium or unprocessed alternatives, and increasing whole fruits, vegetables, nuts, legumes and lean proteins. “Read the labels, monitor your intake, and fill your diet with foods that promote heart health, including whole fruits and vegetables, nuts and seeds, legumes, and lean proteins,” one expert urged. The current U.S. guideline of less than 2,300 mg a day remains a simple benchmark to keep in mind while scientists explore how much sodium might affect memory and brain aging.
