
#65: Can I Eat All the Salt That I Want?
Live Long and Well with Dr. Bobby
How to run an N-of-1 salt test
Bobby Dubois gives step-by-step instructions for a home salt-sensitivity test using regular home blood pressure monitoring.
You read everywhere that you “should” cut salt—especially if your blood pressure is up. But salt also makes food enjoyable. In this episode, I walk through the human evidence (not animal studies) and frame salt as a risk–benefit tradeoff: when does sodium meaningfully matter, for whom, and how can you test your sensitivity?
Big questions we answer
- If you have high blood pressure: does lowering salt always help?
- If your BP is normal but you have heart/kidney risk: does salt matter?
- If you’re basically healthy: how worried should you be?
Key takeaways
- Sodium is essential (nerves, muscles, fluid balance)—the issue is dose and individual response.
- Most sodium comes from packaged/restaurant foods (not your salt shaker).
- Salt restriction lowers BP, but the average effect is modest compared with typical BP meds (context matters).
- Salt sensitivity varies: roughly ~30% of healthy people and ~40–50% of people with hypertension may be “salt-sensitive” (with higher rates in older adults, women, and some ancestry groups).
- If you’re salt-sensitive—especially with hypertension—being mindful of sodium is likely worth it. If you’re not, the “must be low-salt for everyone” story is less clear.
Practical: Do an N-of-1 salt sensitivity test
- Measure home BP daily (or a few times/day) for a week
- Go lower-sodium for 1–2+ weeks (at least within guidelines, possibly lower)
- Track BP change
- Add salt back and watch what happens
- Optional: repeat the low-salt phase for confirmation
If BP shifts meaningfully (often ~3–5 mmHg+), you may be salt-sensitive.
Food reality check (why sodium adds up fast)
- ~10% of a 2,300 mg/day sodium “budget”: 2 slices bread, 1 Tbsp ketchup, or a pinch of salt
- ~1/3: 1 cup canned soup, 1 slice pizza, or a Big Mac
- ~1/2: frozen lasagna, a few deli slices, or a 6” cold-cut sub
Cooking mostly from whole foods makes staying lower-sodium much easier.
Studies & resources mentioned (links embedded)
- CDC hypertension awareness/treatment/control stats: https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/products/databriefs/db511.htm
- Hypertension outcomes review (risk of events/death): https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC8292050/
- Population sodium/BP overview (JACC): https://www.jacc.org/doi/10.1016/j.jacc.2019.11.055
- DASH-Sodium trial (NEJM): https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJM200101043440101
- Sodium restriction meta-analysis (BP/outcomes): https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC12624901/
- Salt sensitivity overview (AHA/Hypertension): https://www.ahajournals.org/doi/10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.123.17959
- Heart failure trials/meta (salt restriction): https://www.ahajournals.org/doi/10.1161/CIRCHEARTFAILURE.122.009879
- Salt substitute trial (NEJM): https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa2105675
Call to action
Are you going to run your own N-of-1 salt test? If you do, I’d love to hear what you learn.
Reminder: I’m an educational resource, not your physi


