Tamil Nadu cultivates seaweed as source for salt that checks blood pressure
a seaweed from Japan being cultivated in Tamil Nadu is being promoted as the source of the best salt for blood pressure patients. Scientists at the Central Salt and Marine Research Institute at Bhavnagar, Gujarat, have found a process of extracting potassium chloride as a by-product of Kappaphycus alvarezii, the red-coloured seaweed.
"Potassium chloride can be added to sodium chloride to form a salt that contains 30 per cent potassium chloride and 65 per cent sodium chloride, which is safe for use by blood pressure patients,' says P K Ghosh, director of the institute. The team has applied for a patent for this salt, which they plan to market as a herbal product to distinguish it from other potassium chloride-based blood pressure salts in the market. The usp of the salt is that it does not have the bitter taste associated with similar products, Ghosh says.
The weeds have some tissues instrumental in the accumulation of potassium chloride in the plant. When the tissues rupture, the salt is released. As the plants are dried, the salt covers the plant. "We tested the salt that is left behind and found only potassium chloride and sand. We decided to do something with the salt,' says Ghosh. It is cost-effective because it was a by-product of a thickening agent they were making, he added.
The institute has patented another salt