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People love to believe that food can replace medicine. We talked about this in Episode One, where I explained that Hippocrates never said “let food be thy medicine.” Still, the myth endures.
Food does matter. The right eating pattern can lower blood pressure. One of the best-studied is the DASH Diet—short for Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension. It is often called America’s version of the Mediterranean Diet. While the Mediterranean Diet was being mapped out for overall health, the DASH researchers asked a sharper question: what foods can lower blood pressure directly?
Why DASH Is UniqueUnlike most nutrition studies, the original DASH trial provided all the food to participants. That meant researchers knew exactly what people ate, meal after meal. This is rare and expensive, but it gave them confidence in the results.
The DASH diet emphasizes:
Because it combined several food groups, DASH worked quickly. Within two weeks, blood pressure dropped.
The results were consistent. People following DASH lowered their systolic blood pressure (the top number) by 8–11 mmHg and their diastolic pressure by 5–6 mmHg. That is about the same as one standard blood pressure pill.
Even more important, DASH showed that sodium reduction matters. Those who cut sodium intake to 1,500–2,300 milligrams per day saw the greatest improvements. This shattered the myth that unlimited salt is safe. Too much sodium raises blood pressure, increases heart disease risk, and fuels strokes.
This is where things get messy. Electrolytes, especially sodium, are necessary during prolonged exercise—typically more than 1–2 hours, in hot weather, or when sweating heavily. Under those conditions, sodium helps prevent hyponatremia, a dangerous drop in blood sodium levels.
However, for most people exercising less than an hour, water is enough. Regular meals will replace lost sodium. Salty drinks or powders aren’t required. In fact, most commercial sports drinks don’t even contain enough sodium to match sweat losses in extreme events.
Here is where the grift appears. Shirtless salesmen on social media love to sell high-priced mango-flavored salt packets as “essential” electrolytes. They promise performance and recovery, but they may actually raise your blood pressure and put you at risk.
Science says otherwise. Electrolyte supplementation should be individualized and used with caution. People at highest risk from unnecessary sodium loading include:
Even ultra-endurance athletes cannot rely on sodium supplements alone. If they drink more than they lose, sodium will not prevent hyponatremia and may make things worse. The best strategy is to drink to thirst and use salty foods or fluids only when truly needed.
How can you follow DASH in real life? Here’s one sample day:
This pattern supplies potassium, magnesium, calcium, and fiber—nutrients that relax blood vessels and lower pressure naturally. Notice what’s missing: salty snacks, processed food, and canned soups.
So what does it all mean? The DASH Diet lowers blood pressure and improves overall health. But it does not replace medication. Blood pressure medicines—ACE inhibitors, ARBs, calcium channel blockers, diuretics—reduce systolic pressure by 20–40 mmHg. That is two or three times more than DASH.
Food helps. Medicine saves. Together, they work best.
Bananas, beans, and leafy greens are wonderful. Electrolyte supplements are rarely needed. Expensive salt powders sold by social media influencers are scams. And the DASH Diet? It’s real, it works, and it shows that food has power—just not enough to replace your beta blocker.
By Terry Simpson4.8
100100 ratings
People love to believe that food can replace medicine. We talked about this in Episode One, where I explained that Hippocrates never said “let food be thy medicine.” Still, the myth endures.
Food does matter. The right eating pattern can lower blood pressure. One of the best-studied is the DASH Diet—short for Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension. It is often called America’s version of the Mediterranean Diet. While the Mediterranean Diet was being mapped out for overall health, the DASH researchers asked a sharper question: what foods can lower blood pressure directly?
Why DASH Is UniqueUnlike most nutrition studies, the original DASH trial provided all the food to participants. That meant researchers knew exactly what people ate, meal after meal. This is rare and expensive, but it gave them confidence in the results.
The DASH diet emphasizes:
Because it combined several food groups, DASH worked quickly. Within two weeks, blood pressure dropped.
The results were consistent. People following DASH lowered their systolic blood pressure (the top number) by 8–11 mmHg and their diastolic pressure by 5–6 mmHg. That is about the same as one standard blood pressure pill.
Even more important, DASH showed that sodium reduction matters. Those who cut sodium intake to 1,500–2,300 milligrams per day saw the greatest improvements. This shattered the myth that unlimited salt is safe. Too much sodium raises blood pressure, increases heart disease risk, and fuels strokes.
This is where things get messy. Electrolytes, especially sodium, are necessary during prolonged exercise—typically more than 1–2 hours, in hot weather, or when sweating heavily. Under those conditions, sodium helps prevent hyponatremia, a dangerous drop in blood sodium levels.
However, for most people exercising less than an hour, water is enough. Regular meals will replace lost sodium. Salty drinks or powders aren’t required. In fact, most commercial sports drinks don’t even contain enough sodium to match sweat losses in extreme events.
Here is where the grift appears. Shirtless salesmen on social media love to sell high-priced mango-flavored salt packets as “essential” electrolytes. They promise performance and recovery, but they may actually raise your blood pressure and put you at risk.
Science says otherwise. Electrolyte supplementation should be individualized and used with caution. People at highest risk from unnecessary sodium loading include:
Even ultra-endurance athletes cannot rely on sodium supplements alone. If they drink more than they lose, sodium will not prevent hyponatremia and may make things worse. The best strategy is to drink to thirst and use salty foods or fluids only when truly needed.
How can you follow DASH in real life? Here’s one sample day:
This pattern supplies potassium, magnesium, calcium, and fiber—nutrients that relax blood vessels and lower pressure naturally. Notice what’s missing: salty snacks, processed food, and canned soups.
So what does it all mean? The DASH Diet lowers blood pressure and improves overall health. But it does not replace medication. Blood pressure medicines—ACE inhibitors, ARBs, calcium channel blockers, diuretics—reduce systolic pressure by 20–40 mmHg. That is two or three times more than DASH.
Food helps. Medicine saves. Together, they work best.
Bananas, beans, and leafy greens are wonderful. Electrolyte supplements are rarely needed. Expensive salt powders sold by social media influencers are scams. And the DASH Diet? It’s real, it works, and it shows that food has power—just not enough to replace your beta blocker.

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