A new study has recently revealed that salt accumulation in skin and tissue can help ward off infections.

COMMERCIAL BREAK
SCROLL TO CONTINUE READING

Salt stores might be nature's way of providing a barrier to microbial invasion and boosting immune defences. The researchers found that salt increased the activation of infection-fighting macrophages, a type of white blood cell.

The researchers also tested the effect of an extremely high-salt diet in mice with persistent footpad infections. Salt stores at the site of the infection increased after consumption of the high-salt diet, and the infections cleared up.

The latest finding suggested that age-related salt accumulation by the skin might be a compensatory response to declining cellular barrier function and microbe entry. It also might reflect chronic, low-level inflammation associated with diseases of "aging," including heart disease and some cancers. Thus it might be beneficial to counter this age-related increase in salt stores.

The study is published in the journal Cell Metabolism.