PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

High-salt diet inflames the brain and raises blood pressure, study finds

A discovery in rats challenges long-held beliefs about hypertension and points to the brain as a new treatment target

2025-08-20
(Press-News.org) A new study finds that a high-salt diet triggers brain inflammation that drives up blood pressure.

The research, led by McGill University scientist Masha Prager-Khoutorsky in collaboration with an interdisciplinary team at McGill and the Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre, suggests the brain may be a missing link in certain forms of high blood pressure – or hypertension – traditionally attributed to the kidneys.

“This is new evidence that high blood pressure can originate in the brain, opening the door for developing treatments that act on the brain,” said Prager-Khoutorsky, associate professor in McGill’s Department of Physiology.

Hypertension affects two-thirds of people over 60 and contributes to 10 million deaths worldwide each year. Often symptomless, the condition increases the risk of heart disease, stroke and other serious health problems.

About one-third of patients don’t respond to standard medications, which primarily target the blood vessels and kidneys based on the long-standing view that hypertension begins there. The study, published in the journal Neuron, suggests the brain may also be a key driver of the condition, particularly in treatment-resistant cases.

How salt disrupts the brain To mimic human eating patterns, rats were given water containing two per cent salt, comparable to a daily diet high in fast food and items like bacon, instant noodles and processed cheese.

The high-salt diet activated immune cells in a specific brain region, causing inflammation and a surge in the hormone vasopressin, which raises blood pressure. Researchers tracked these changes using cutting-edge brain imaging and lab techniques that only recently became available.

“The brain’s role in hypertension has largely been overlooked, in part because it’s harder to study,” Prager-Khoutorsky said. “But with new techniques, we’re able to see these changes in action.”

The researchers used rats instead of the more commonly studied mice because rats regulate salt and water more like humans. That makes the findings more likely to apply to people, noted Prager-Khoutorsky.

Next, the scientists plan to study whether similar processes are involved in other forms of hypertension.

About the study “Microglia regulate neuronal activity via structural remodeling of astrocytes” by Ning Gu et al., was published in Neuron and supported by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada and the Azrieli Foundation.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Updated lab guide equips researchers with modern tools to identify plant pathogens

2025-08-20
A trusted and essential resource for more than four decades, Laboratory Guide for Identification of Plant Pathogenic Bacteria returns in a fully updated fourth edition. This guide remains the most authoritative reference for plant pathologists, diagnosticians, and students who need to accurately identify bacterial plant pathogens using both conventional and cutting-edge methods. Each chapter is authored by leading experts and provides a holistic, comprehensive overview of the genus or genera, including characteristics useful for identification, isolation techniques, and molecular, ...

Inflammation and aging: Looking through an evolutionary lens

2025-08-20
It’s been a long-accepted reality that with age comes increased inflammation – so widely accepted it’s been dubbed “inflammaging.” With this increase in age-related chronic inflammation also comes serious health concerns, such as cardiovascular disease and Alzheimer’s. But according to new research, inflammaging isn’t as universal of an experience as previously thought. Published today in Proceedings of Royal Society B, “Inflammaging is minimal among forager-horticulturalists in the Bolivian Amazon,” the work highlights little inflammaging in one non-industrialized ...

With human feedback, AI-driven robots learn tasks better and faster

2025-08-20
At UC Berkeley, researchers in Sergey Levine’s Robotic AI and Learning Lab eyed a table where a tower of 39 Jenga blocks stood perfectly stacked. Then a white-and-black robot, its single limb doubled over like a hunched-over giraffe, zoomed toward the tower, brandishing a black leather whip. Through what might have seemed to a casual viewer like a miracle of physics, the whip struck in precisely the right spot to send a single block flying out from the stack while the rest of the tower remained structurally sound. This task, known as ...

Urban civilization rose in Southern Mesopotamia on the back of tides

2025-08-20
Woods Hole, Mass. (August 20, 2025) -- A newly published study challenges long-held assumptions about the origins of urban civilization in ancient Mesopotamia, suggesting that the rise of Sumer was driven by the dynamic interplay of rivers, tides, and sediments at the head of the Persian Gulf. Published today in PLOS ONE, the study, Morphodynamic Foundations of Sumer, is led by Liviu Giosan, Senior Scientist Emeritus in Geology & Geophysics at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI), and Reed Goodman, Assistant Professor of Environmental Social Science at Baruch Institute of Social Ecology and Forest Science (BICEFS), Clemson ...

Parkinson’s disease risk increases with metabolic syndrome

2025-08-20
EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE UNTIL 4:00 P.M. ET, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 20, 2025 MINNEAPOLIS — Having a larger waistline, high blood pressure and other risk factors that make up metabolic syndrome is associated with an increased risk of Parkinson’s disease, according to a study published on August 20, 2025, in Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology. The study does not prove that metabolic syndrome causes Parkinson’s disease; it only shows an association. Metabolic syndrome is defined as having three or more of the following risk factors: excess belly fat, high blood pressure, high blood sugar, higher than normal triglycerides, ...

What happened before the Big Bang?

2025-08-20
We’re often told it is “unscientific” or “meaningless” to ask what happened before the big bang. But a new paper by FQxI cosmologist Eugene Lim, of King's College London, UK, and astrophysicists Katy Clough, of Queen Mary University of London, UK, and Josu Aurrekoetxea, at Oxford University, UK, published in Living Reviews in Relativity, in June 2025, proposes a way forward: using complex computer simulations to numerically (rather than exactly) solve Einstein’s equations for gravity in extreme situations. The team argues that numerical relativity should be applied increasingly in cosmology to probe ...

First SwRI-owned office outside Texas opens in Warner Robins, Georgia

2025-08-20
SAN ANTONIO — August 20, 2025 — Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) has constructed its first facility outside of its San Antonio headquarters in Warner Robins, Georgia. The 33,000-square-foot, $18.5 million building, equipped to advance national defense technology, is strategically located 3 miles from Robins Air Force Base to bolster SwRI’s longstanding support for the U.S. Air Force. Institute leadership welcomed government and community leaders to the grounds on August 20 for a ribbon-cutting ceremony and tours to mark the grand opening of the new structure, which houses offices, conference rooms and laboratories. SwRI employees based in Warner Robins ...

Ad hominem attacks are the most common way users confront content they perceive as wrong in comment sections beneath news videos, with over 40% of analyzed comments relying on reputation-based insults

2025-08-20
Ad hominem attacks are the most common way users confront content they perceive as wrong in comment sections beneath news videos, with over 40% of analyzed comments relying on reputation-based insults to oppose earlier replies Article URL: http://plos.io/4os0Tkc Article title: Beyond ad hominem attacks: A typology of the discursive tactics used when objecting to news commentary on social media Author countries: U.S. Funding: This research was funded by the National Science Foundation Division of Information and Intelligent Systems (NSF, Funding number: 2106476). Full ...

California's dwarf Channel Island foxes mostly have relatively bigger brains than their larger mainland gray fox cousins, which may reflect island-specific evolutionary pressures

2025-08-20
California's dwarf Channel Island foxes mostly have relatively bigger brains than their larger mainland gray fox cousins, which may reflect island-specific evolutionary pressures Article URL: http://plos.io/4m6uyhk Article title: Increased brain size of the dwarf Channel Island fox (Urocyon littoralis) challenges “Island Syndrome” and suggests little evidence of domestication Author countries: U.S. Funding: Funding for this project and Kimberly's PhD research was provided by Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences at the University of Southern California; the Wrigley Institute for Environmental ...

Extreme heat poses growing threat to our aging population

2025-08-20
Embargoed until 2:00 PM ET on August 20, 2025 COLUMBUS, Ohio – Older adults often don’t realize how vulnerable they are to extreme heat and most aren’t prepared for long periods of hot weather, according to a review of more than 40 studies.   In the review, researchers found that most studies focused on how older adults react when heat waves strike, such as staying hydrated or moving to cooler locations.   But there is less research on how they plan for prolonged heat events, which may be evidence of low-risk ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Singapore scientists discover lung cancer's "bodyguard system" - and how to disarm it

Bacteria use wrapping flagella to tunnel through microscopic passages

New critique prompts correction of high-profile Yellowstone aspen study, highlighting challenges in measuring ecosystem response to wolf reintroduction

Stroke survivors miss critical treatment, face greater disability due to systemic transfer delays

Delayed stroke care linked to increased disability risk

Long term use of anti-acid drugs may not increase stomach cancer risk

Non-monetary 'honor-based' incentives linked to increased blood donations

Natural ovulation as effective as hormones before IVF embryo transfer

Major clinical trial provides definitive evidence of impacts of steroid treatment on severe brain infection

Low vitamin D levels shown to raise risk of hospitalization with potentially fatal respiratory tract infections by 33%

Diagnoses of major conditions failing to recover since the pandemic

Scientists solve 66 million-year-old mystery of how Earth’s greenhouse age ended

Red light therapy shows promise for protecting football players’ brains

Trees — not grass and other greenery — associated with lower heart disease risk in cities

Chemical Insights scientist receives Achievement Award from the Society of Toxicology

Breakthrough organic crystalline material repairs itself in extreme cold temperatures, unlocking new possibilities for space and deep-sea technologies

Scientists discover novel immune ‘traffic controller’ hijacked by virus

When tropical oceans were oxygen oases

Positive interactions dominate among marine microbes, six-year study reveals

Safeguarding the Winter Olympics-Paralympics against climate change

Most would recommend RSV immunizations for older and pregnant people

Donated blood has a shelf life. A new test tracks how it's aging

Stroke during pregnancy, postpartum associated with more illness, job status later

American Meteorological Society announces new executive director

People with “binge-watching addiction” are more likely to be lonely

Wild potato follows a path to domestication in the American Southwest

General climate advocacy ad campaign received more public engagement compared to more-tailored ad campaign promoting sustainable fashion

Medical LLMs may show real-world potential in identifying individuals with major depressive disorder using WhatsApp voice note recordings

Early translational study supports the role of high-dose inhaled nitric oxide as a potential antimicrobial therapy

AI can predict preemies’ path, Stanford Medicine-led study shows

[Press-News.org] High-salt diet inflames the brain and raises blood pressure, study finds
A discovery in rats challenges long-held beliefs about hypertension and points to the brain as a new treatment target