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Potassium-rich diet may cut risk of heart failure by 24%, study suggests

3 days ago
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Eating foods rich in potassium, such as avocados, bananas and spinach, could reduce your risk of heart conditions, hospitalisation and death by 24%, a study suggests.Previous research has shown that cutting out salt from meals can slash your risk of heart problems.Reducing the number of meals to which you add salt or ditching it altogether can make a huge difference to your heart health.Potassium increases the amount of salt your body removes from the bloodstream.In a study, scientists set out to understand whether more potassium might benefit people by reducing their cardiovascular risk.

The senior study author, Prof Henning Bundgaard, a professor at Copenhagen University hospital, said: “The human body evolved on a potassium-rich, sodium-poor diet – when we were born and raised on the savannah and eating [fruit and vegetables].We [now] tend to go to [a] modern diet that is processed foods and, the more processed, we see more and more sodium in the food and less potassium, meaning that the ratio between the two has changed from 10:1 to 1:2 – a dramatic change.“Potassium is crucial for cardiac function and we know from observational studies that low potassium increases the risk of arrhythmias and heart failures and death.We also know that potassium can be increased.“The simple question we asked in the trial was: would we benefit the patients by increasing potassium?”The trial involved 1,200 heart patients in Denmark with implantable cardioverter defibrillators (ICDs), half of whom were given dietary advice on how to boost their potassium levels.

“We have a list [of foods] that we gave to the patients.We followed general dietary instructions – [in Denmark known as] the pyramid of foods.White beets, beetroots, cabbage and so on are all high-content potassium-rich diets.We did not recommend meat, which is also potassium-rich, because it is also rich in sodium and counter-interacts the increase in potassium.”A dietary increase in blood potassium levels was associated with a “significantly lower risk” – 24% – of heart conditions, heart-linked hospitalisation or death from any cause, the results showed.

They were presented at the European Society of Cardiology congress in Madrid, the world’s largest heart conference.Bundgaard said: “With a broader view we can say that higher dietary intake of potassium may not only benefit patients with heart disease but probably all of us, so maybe we should all reduce sodium and increase potassium content in our food.”Dr Carrie Ruxton, a dietitian who was not involved with the study, said: “Everyone knows about cutting down on salt, but few people realise that increasing potassium is almost as important for preventing strokes and heart attacks.“The European Food Safety Authority highlighted a lack of potassium across Europe as a major diet concern.In the UK, the latest National Diet and Nutrition Survey – published this year – shows that a third of teenagers and a quarter of adults are at risk of potassium deficiency, with implications for blood pressure control and muscle function.

“We can do more individually to boost our potassium intakes by eating more fruit, vegetables and fish.Fruit juices are particularly rich in potassium.Other key foods are spinach, lima beans, baked potato, yoghurt, banana and tuna.”Dr Sonya Babu-Narayan, a consultant cardiologist and clinical director of the British Heart Foundation, said: “This trial from Denmark found that increasing blood potassium levels into the high normal range in people with ICDs improved patient outcomes, and importantly reduced their chances of needing a shock.“If you’re advised by your doctor to improve your dietary potassium intake, you can do this by including more vegetables and fruit rich in potassium such as spinach, bananas or avocados in your diet, as well as pulses, fish, nuts and seeds.

“Don’t be tempted to try to increase your potassium intake with supplements unless supervised by your doctor, as ending up with too high a potassium level is dangerous – for example it can cause cardiac arrest.”
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Doctors develop AI stethoscope that can detect major heart conditions in 15 seconds

Doctors have successfully developed an artificial intelligence-led stethoscope that can detect three heart conditions in 15 seconds.Invented in 1816, the traditional stethoscope – used to listen to sounds within the body – has been a vital part of every medic’s toolkit for more than two centuries.Now a team have designed a hi-tech upgrade with AI capabilities that can diagnose heart failure, heart valve disease and abnormal heart rhythms almost instantly.The new stethoscope developed by researchers at Imperial College London and Imperial College healthcare NHS trust can analyse tiny differences in heartbeat and blood flow undetectable to the human ear, and take a rapid ECG at the same time.Details of the breakthrough, which could boost early diagnosis of the three conditions, were presented to thousands of doctors at the European Society of Cardiology annual congress in Madrid, the world’s largest heart conference

2 days ago
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ChatGPT encouraged Adam Raine’s suicidal thoughts. His family’s lawyer says OpenAI knew it was broken

Adam Raine was just 16 when he started using ChatGPT for help with his homework. While his initial prompts to the AI chatbot were about subjects like geometry and chemistry – questions like: “What does it mean in geometry if it says Ry=1” – in just a matter of months he began asking about more personal topics.“Why is it that I have no happiness, I feel loneliness, perpetual boredom anxiety and loss yet I don’t feel depression, I feel no emotion regarding sadness,” he asked ChatGPT in the fall of 2024.Instead of urging Raine to seek mental health help, ChatGPT asked the teen whether he wanted to explore his feelings more, explaining the idea of emotional numbness to him. That was the start of a dark turn in Raine’s conversations with the chatbot, according to a new lawsuit filed by his family against OpenAI and chief executive Sam Altman

3 days ago
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Government faces questions after review of 11 major UK data breaches

The government is facing calls to explain why it has yet to implement all the recommendations from a 2023 review into a spate of serious public sector data breaches, including the exposure of Afghans who worked with British military, victims of child sexual abuse and 6,000 disability claimants.On Thursday ministers finally published the information security review, which was triggered by the 2023 leak of personal data of about 10,000 serving officers in the Police Service of Northern Ireland.The review by Cabinet Office officials into 11 public sector data breaches, encompassing the HMRC, the Metropolitan police, the benefits system and the MoD, found three common themes:A lack of controls over ad hoc downloads and exports of aggregations of sensitive data.The release of sensitive information via “wrong recipient” emails and failure to use bcc properly.Hidden personal data emerging from spreadsheets destined for release

4 days ago
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ChatGPT offered bomb recipes and hacking tips during safety tests

A ChatGPT model gave researchers detailed instructions on how to bomb a sports venue – including weak points at specific arenas, explosives recipes and advice on covering tracks – according to safety testing carried out this summer.OpenAI’s GPT-4.1 also detailed how to weaponise anthrax and how to make two types of illegal drugs.The testing was part of an unusual collaboration between OpenAI, the $500bn artificial intelligence start-up led by Sam Altman, and rival company Anthropic, founded by experts who left OpenAI over safety fears. Each company tested the other’s models by pushing them to help with dangerous tasks

4 days ago
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Honor Magic V5 review: fantastic foldable phone that needs better Android software

Honor’s latest foldable phone-tablet attempts to usurp Samsung as the leader of the pack with a super-thin body, massive battery and a ginormous camera lump on the back.The Guardian’s journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link. Learn more.The Magic V5 is an impressively thin piece of engineering, slimmed down to about 8

4 days ago
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How Elon Musk’s billionaire Doge lieutenant took over the US’s biggest MDMA company

Months before Antonio Gracias took a leading role in the dismantling of the federal government by the “department of government efficiency” (Doge), he was at Burning Man.In the dusty Nevada desert, Gracias, a billionaire private equity investor and one of Elon Musk’s closest friends, attended Nova Heaven, a sunrise rave tribute to victims of the Hamas-led 7 October terrorist attack, and found himself dancing next to Rick Doblin – the US’s most prominent advocate for psychedelic drugs.As hundreds of burners shuffled their sandy feet to psytrance music, Gracias started up a conversation. He had a piece of business advice.Doblin, 71 with an avuncular smile and tranquil, confident demeanor, is the founder of the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (Maps), and has spent decades trying to legalize drugs such as MDMA, commonly known as ecstasy, for use in the treatment of trauma

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Angela Rayner ‘clear she followed rules’ when buying Hove flat, says Bridget Phillipson

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Doubts cast on Kemi Badenoch’s claim of US medical school offer

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The budget, immigration, Trump’s visit: the tests lying in wait for Keir Starmer

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Tories would maximise North Sea oil and gas extraction, Badenoch to say

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Richard Tice hits back at C of E criticism of Reform immigration policy

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Bridget Phillipson: parents must do more about bad behaviour and attendance in schools

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