Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1942/42969
Title: Dietary sodium and fluid intake in heart failure. A clinical consensus statement of the Heart Failure Association of the ESC
Authors: MULLENS, Wilfried 
Damman, Kevin
DHONT, Sebastiaan 
Banerjee, Debasish
Bayes-Genis, Antoni
Cannata, Antonio
Chioncel, Ovidiu
Cikes, Maja
Ezekowitz, Justin
Flammer, Andreas J.
Mebazaa, Alexandre
MARTENS, Pieter 
Mentz, Robert J.
Miro, Oscar
Moura, Brenda
Nunez, Julio
Ter Maaten, Jozine M.
Testani, Jeffrey
van Kimmenade, Roland
Metra, Marco
Rosano, Giuseppe M. C.
VERBRUGGE, Frederik 
Filippatos, Gerasimos
Issue Date: 2024
Publisher: WILEY
Source: EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF HEART FAILURE,
Status: Early view
Abstract: Sodium and fluid restriction has traditionally been advocated in patients with heart failure (HF) due to their sodium and water avid state. However, most evidence regarding the altered sodium handling, fluid homeostasis and congestion-related signs and symptoms in patients with HF originates from untreated patient cohorts and physiological investigations. Recent data challenge the beneficial role of dietary sodium and fluid restriction in HF. Consequently, the European Society of Cardiology HF guidelines have gradually downgraded these recommendations over time, now advising for the limitation of salt intake to no more than 5 g/day in patients with HF, while contemplating fluid restriction of 1.5-2 L/day only in selected patients. Therefore, the objective of this clinical consensus statement is to provide advice on fluid and sodium intake in patients with acute and chronic HF, based on contemporary evidence and expert opinion.
Notes: Filippatos, G (corresponding author), Attikon Univ Hosp, Dept Cardiol, Athens, Greece.; Mullens, W (corresponding author), Ziekenhuis Oost Limburg Genk, Genk, Belgium.
wilfried.mullens@zol.be; gfilippatos@gmail.com
Keywords: Heart failure;Sodium;Fluid
Document URI: http://hdl.handle.net/1942/42969
ISSN: 1388-9842
e-ISSN: 1879-0844
DOI: 10.1002/ejhf.3244
ISI #: 001201361300001
Rights: 2024 European Society of Cardiology. Open access
Category: A1
Type: Journal Contribution
Appears in Collections:Research publications

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