Eating Too Much Salt Is More Dangerous Than You Think

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Think about the last meal you had. Whether it was dal-chawal cooked at home, a plate of chaat from your favourite street stall, or a pack of namkeen you grabbed while watching TV — salt was right there. Quietly. In every bite.

We never really think twice about salt. It sits on every Indian dining table like an old friend. But here is the truth that Dr. Amit Kashid, one of the Best Ayurvedic Doctors in Otur and Pune, shares with his patients every single day at Ashtang Ayurved Hospital — salt is not just a flavour. It is a silent health risk. And most of us are consuming far more of it than we realise.

The numbers are genuinely alarming. Almost 85% of Indian adults exceed the WHO daily salt limit. The average Indian consumes 8 to 11 grams of salt every day — more than double the WHO’s recommended maximum of 5 grams. And the consequences are showing up everywhere — rising blood pressure cases, increasing heart disease, kidney failure, and strokes — across all age groups, including young adults in their 30s.

This is not a problem of the future. It is happening right now, on your plate, at every meal.

Dr. Amit Kashid — recognized as one of the Best Ayurvedic Doctors in junnar with over 14 years of experience in Ayurveda — holds a BAMS degree and an MD in Ayurved, with advanced training in Kshar Sutra Therapy under renowned Ayurvedic experts.

Since 2013, he has been serving as the Chief Consultant and Founder of Ashtang Ayurved Hospital, a well-known Best Ayurvedic Hospital in Otur, Junnar and Pune. The hospital specialises in Panchakarma therapies, ano-rectal treatments, women’s healthcare and Ayurvedic management of chronic conditions. In his years of clinical practice, excess salt intake is one of the most common and most overlooked root causes he sees behind hypertension, kidney stress and chronic inflammation in patients.

In this article, Dr. Kashid breaks it all down — clearly, simply, and honestly.

Salt vs Sodium — What Is the Difference?

Before we go further, let us clear up one thing that confuses most people.

Salt and sodium are not the same thing. Salt is sodium chloride — it is made up of 40% sodium and 60% chloride. When you read food labels, the figure mentioned is usually “sodium” — not salt. So if a packet of chips says it contains 400mg of sodium, the actual salt equivalent is higher.

Here is what makes this important: what sodium does to your body depends entirely on how much of it you consume. The body actually needs sodium to survive. It helps with nerve signalling, muscle movement, fluid balance and maintaining blood pressure at normal levels. So yes, sodium is good for health — but only in the right, small amounts.

The body needs just 500 milligrams of sodium per day to function properly. Yet most Indians are consuming 3,000 to 4,500 milligrams every single day. That is nearly 6 to 9 times more than what the body actually requires.

The WHO recommends no more than 5 grams of salt (about 2,000mg of sodium) per day. The American Heart Association recommends staying below 1,500mg of sodium for heart health. Most of us are nowhere close to these limits.

How Much Salt Are Indians Actually Eating?

India has a unique salt problem. Unlike Western countries, where the biggest source of excess sodium is packaged and processed food, India faces a double threat.

The first threat is traditional cooking. Indian cuisine — as delicious as it is — relies heavily on salt. Curries, dals, pickles, chutneys, papad, sabzis — salt goes in generously at every stage. Around 75% of salt in the Indian diet comes from homemade food. This means that even if you never touch a packet of chips, you could still be getting far too much salt from your own kitchen.

The second threat is the explosion of packaged and restaurant food in urban India. Instant noodles, flavoured snacks, biscuits, bread, sauces, ready-to-eat meals, and street food like chaat and biryani — all of these carry significant hidden sodium. Globally, the average adult salt intake is 10.78 grams per day — more than double what it should be. India is very much part of this trend, and urban Indians are leading the surge.

Hidden Salt — The Sources You Never Suspect:

This is the section that surprises most people when Dr. Amit Kashid discusses it during consultations at Ashtang Ayurved Hospital.

High salt intake does not always come from obviously salty food. Hidden sodium is present in foods that do not even taste particularly salty. This is where the real danger lies.

Common Indian hidden salt culprits:

  • Papad and pickle — shockingly high in sodium, even one or two pieces add up
  • Namkeen, bhujiya, sev and chaat — one small bowl can carry nearly a full day’s sodium
  • Samosa, kachori and fried snacks from street stalls
  • Biryani and restaurant curries — extra salt is added in restaurants for flavour enhancement
  • Instant noodles — one packet can contain 1,000mg of sodium or more
  • Biscuits, bread and bakery items — most people never check the sodium on these
  • Packaged sauces, tomato ketchup and salad dressings
  • Ready-to-eat meals and frozen foods

And here is the one that really shocks people — even some “healthy” foods carry significant sodium. Buttermilk, salted curd, certain dals cooked with added salt, and spice mixes all add to your daily sodium count without you realising it.

The side effects of salt do not come just from the salt shaker on your table. They come from a hundred small sources across the day.

What Eating Too Much Salt Does to Your Body?

This is the heart of the matter. Understanding the effects of sodium on the body — both quickly and over time — is what motivates real change.

Short-Term Effects — What You Feel Within Hours?

When you eat a high-salt meal, the effects show up faster than most people expect.

  • Bloating and water retention is usually the first sign. Excess sodium pulls water into your bloodstream and tissues, making you feel heavy, puffy and uncomfortable. Puffiness around the face and fingers after a salty meal is your body literally trying to dilute the excess sodium.
  • Increased thirst follows next. High sodium makes your body demand more water to restore balance.
  • Headaches are another common short-term complaint — particularly after very salty restaurant meals or snack binges.

And here is one effect that very few people connect to salt — disturbed sleep. Eating a high-sodium dinner spikes your blood pressure and triggers your body to process the excess fluid through your kidneys. The result? You wake up multiple times at night feeling thirsty or needing to urinate.

Long-Term Effects — The Serious Dangers:

This is where the disadvantages of salt go from uncomfortable to truly life-threatening.

  • High blood pressure (hypertension) is the most well-documented effect of high sodium intake. When you consume excess sodium, more water enters the bloodstream. This increases the volume of blood in your vessels, which then pushes harder against the vessel walls — raising blood pressure. Nearly 28% of Indian adults suffer from hypertension linked directly to high salt consumption. Hypertension is not just a number on a machine. It silently damages your arteries, your heart and your kidneys every single day.
  • Heart disease and stroke follow from uncontrolled hypertension. High sodium over years stiffens blood vessel walls, overworks the heart muscle and dramatically increases the risk of heart attack and stroke — India’s leading causes of death.
  • Kidney damage is another critical consequence. The kidneys are responsible for filtering out excess sodium from the blood. When you consistently eat too much salt, the kidneys are forced to work overtime. Over years, this leads to declining kidney function, protein leakage in urine and eventually chronic kidney disease. People who already have diabetes are especially vulnerable — excess salt accelerates their kidney risk significantly.
  • Gastric cancer is a link that is rarely discussed in India, but the evidence is clear. High-salt diets damage the stomach lining over time and are strongly associated with an increased risk of stomach cancer.
  • Bone health is another casualty. The effect of sodium on the body includes increased calcium excretion through urine — meaning the more salt you eat, the more calcium your bones lose. This quietly raises the risk of osteoporosis and fractures, particularly in women after menopause.

Who Is Most at Risk?

While excess salt is harmful for everyone, certain groups face a much higher risk from high sodium intake:

  • People with existing high blood pressure or heart disease
  • Diabetics — already carrying an elevated kidney risk
  • Children and teenagers eating ultra-processed snacks daily
  • Elderly adults whose kidney function naturally declines with age
  • Pregnant women — excess sodium worsens oedema and blood pressure in pregnancy
  • Office workers with sedentary lifestyles who regularly eat packaged, high-sodium convenience food

If you fall into any of these categories, Dr. Amit Kashid strongly recommends a formal dietary assessment to evaluate your sodium intake and its impact on your health.

Warning Signs You Are Eating Too Much Salt:

Your body gives you signals. Here is what to watch for:
Persistent puffiness or swelling around the eyes and ankles, especially in the morning

  • Frequent headaches that have no obvious cause
  • Constant thirst even though you are drinking water regularly
  • Feeling bloated and heavy through most of the day
  • Blood pressure readings that keep rising on follow-ups
  • Frequent nighttime urination that disrupts your sleep
  • Intense cravings for salty food — the more you eat, the more you want. This is because high salt intake gradually numbs your taste buds, making normal food taste bland.

The Ayurvedic Angle — What Ancient Wisdom Says About Salt?

As an Ayurvedic physician with over 14 years of experience, Dr. Amit Kashid finds it deeply meaningful that classical Ayurveda arrived at the same conclusions thousands of years ago that modern medicine is only now proving through scientific research and clinical data.

Ayurveda classifies salt, known as Lavana Rasa, as one of the six essential tastes (Shad Rasa). It is not considered harmful when consumed appropriately. In fact, Ayurveda recognizes salt as necessary for health and even therapeutic when used in the right quantity. Among all types of salt, Saindhava Lavana (Rock Salt), commonly known as Himalayan Pink Salt, is considered the best. Ayurvedic texts describe it as lighter, easier to digest, and less aggravating to the doshas compared to processed table salt.

However, Ayurveda is equally clear that excessive consumption of Lavana Rasa can have serious consequences. Excess salt aggravates Pitta Dosha and Rakta Dhatu (blood tissue), leading to increased heat, inflammation, tissue damage, premature aging, and various systemic disorders. Remarkably, these observations closely align with modern medical findings regarding the harmful effects of excessive sodium intake.

According to Ayurveda, the adverse effects of excessive salt consumption may develop gradually and often go unnoticed in the early stages. Over time, however, they can contribute to a wide range of health problems affecting multiple systems of the body.

Health Problems Caused by Excess Salt Intake:
  • Hair Loss (Khalitya): Excessive salt consumption may increase hair fall and contribute to premature baldness.
  • Premature Greying of Hair (Palitya): Aggravation of body heat and depletion of tissues may cause hair to turn grey earlier than expected.
  • Excessive Thirst (Trishna): High salt intake disturbs the body’s fluid balance, resulting in persistent thirst.
  • Burning Sensation and Excess Body Heat (Santapa): The body may experience excessive heat, causing burning sensations in the palms, soles, eyes, and throughout the body.
  • Dizziness or Fainting (Murchha): Disturbances in circulation and fluid balance may lead to dizziness and, in severe cases, fainting.
  • Inflammatory Skin Disorders (Visarpa): Excess salt may contribute to redness, irritation, inflammation, and certain skin diseases.
  • Swelling and Water Retention (Shotha): Fluid retention may lead to swelling of the face, hands, feet, and ankles.
  • Skin Diseases (Kushtha and Other Skin Disorders): Various skin conditions, including itching, rashes, discoloration, and chronic skin disorders, may become more prevalent.
  • Urticaria or Allergic Skin Reactions (Kotha / Sheetapitta): Sudden itching, hives, red patches, and allergic skin eruptions may occur.
  • Convulsions or Neurological Disturbances (Akshepaka): In severe cases, excessive salt may adversely affect the nervous system, potentially leading to spasms or convulsive episodes.
  • Impairment of Sensory Functions: The functioning of the ears, eyes, and other sensory organs may gradually become affected.
  • Blood Disorders (Raktapitta): Excess salt may aggravate blood-related disorders, leading to symptoms such as bleeding tendencies, excessive body heat, and inflammatory conditions.
  • Delayed Healing and Tissue Damage: Chronic inflammation can impair healing processes and contribute to tissue damage.
  • Increase in Toxic Accumulation and Metabolic Disturbances: Ayurveda states that excessive salt can increase the accumulation of harmful metabolic by-products and toxins within the body.
  • Vatarakta (Gout-like Disorders): Excessive salt intake may contribute to joint pain, swelling, redness, stiffness, and disorders resembling gout.
The Most Important Consequence:
  • Loss of Strength (Bala) and Vital Essence (Ojas): According to Ayurveda, Ojas represents the body’s immunity, vitality, endurance, mental stability, resistance to disease, and overall life force. Excessive salt consumption gradually weakens physical strength, reduces immunity, increases fatigue, and diminishes the body’s natural capacity to maintain health and fight disease.
  • Ayurveda and Modern Medicine Agree: Modern medicine associates excessive sodium intake with hypertension, cardiovascular disease, kidney dysfunction, chronic inflammation, fluid retention, and accelerated aging. Ayurveda described many of these harmful effects centuries ago through the concepts of aggravated Pitta, vitiated Rakta, tissue depletion, and loss of Ojas.

The striking similarity between ancient Ayurvedic wisdom and modern scientific understanding highlights a timeless truth:

Simple Conclusion:

“Excessive salt does not only raise blood pressure; it gradually weakens the hair, skin, blood, joints, kidneys, heart, and the body’s overall vitality.”

Therefore, Ayurveda teaches:

“Salt is essential for life, but when consumed in excess, it acts like a poison to the body.”

Classical wisdom and modern science are perfectly aligned on this point.

How to Reduce Salt Without Killing the Taste?

Reducing salt does not mean eating tasteless food. It means cooking smarter. Here is practical, realistic advice from the team at Ashtang Ayurved Hospital:

  • Cook at home more often. Over 80% of India’s sodium intake comes from salt added during cooking and at the table. Your own kitchen is actually where the biggest change can happen — and you are in complete control of it.
  • Use herbs and spices to build flavour. Cumin, coriander, turmeric, black pepper, lemon juice, dry mango powder (amchur), fresh ginger and green chillies all add depth and flavour without adding sodium. Your food will not taste flat — it will taste different, and within 2 to 4 weeks, your taste buds genuinely adapt.
  • Read food labels. Look for the word “sodium” on packaged food — not just “salt.” Any product with more than 600mg of sodium per serving is high sodium and should be a rare treat, not a daily habit.
  • Reduce pickle, papad and chutney portions. These are beloved parts of Indian meals — but have them in very small amounts, not as a side dish you refill three times.
  • Ask for less salt when eating out. Most restaurants are happy to accommodate this request. Make it a habit.
  • Eat more potassium-rich foods. Bananas, coconut water, sweet potato, spinach and tomatoes all help your kidneys flush out excess sodium more efficiently. Potassium and sodium work as balancing partners in the body.

Quick Reference — How Much Salt Is Too Much?

Visual guide: One flat teaspoon of table salt contains approximately 2,300mg of sodium. That is already at or above the recommended daily limit — before you account for salt already present in your food.

Common Indian foods and approximate sodium content:

  • 1 piece papad — 300 to 500mg sodium
  • 1 serving instant noodles — 800 to 1,200mg sodium
  • 1 tablespoon pickle — 200 to 400mg sodium
  • 1 plate chaat — 600 to 900mg sodium
  • 1 serving restaurant dal makhani — 700 to 1,000mg sodium

Conclusion — Salt Is Not the Enemy. Ignorance Is.

Salt itself is not the villain. Your body genuinely needs it. But the gap between what the body needs and what most Indians are actually consuming is dangerously wide — and it is silently driving the explosion of hypertension, heart disease, kidney failure and stroke across the country.

The good news is that this is one of the most modifiable risk factors there is. Small, consistent changes — cooking with a little less salt, reading labels, choosing fresh food over packaged, eating more fruits and vegetables — can genuinely protect your heart, kidneys and brain for decades to come.

Dr. Amit Kashid and the team at Ashtang Ayurved Hospital — one of the Best Ayurvedic Hospitals in Otur — regularly guide patients through dietary corrections as part of holistic Ayurvedic treatment plans. Whether you are managing hypertension, kidney health, obesity or simply want to prevent disease before it starts, a sodium-aware diet is one of the most powerful tools available to you.

Start today. Check your BP. Read one food label. Reduce one salty food from tomorrow’s meal.

If you have persistent high blood pressure, unexplained swelling, frequent headaches or kidney concerns, do not wait. Visit Ashtang Ayurved Hospital in Otur for a consultation with Dr. Amit Kashid and get a complete assessment before the damage deepens.

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