Showing posts with label Kidney Disease Diets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kidney Disease Diets. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 24, 2014

Kidney Disease Protein.

Kidney Disease Protein.
Protein is undoubtedly a necessary nutrient. However, for kidney disease patients, it is difficult to manage the condition with a high amount of protein intake. This is because when ingested by the body, protein waste products are produced. A healthy kidney is perfectly able to filter this waste which is then eliminated from the body in the urine. Therefore, for persons with kidney disease, protein intake has to be limited for effective management of the condition.



Kidneys that are not in perfectly good health have no capacity to remove protein waste from the body system. Kidney disease and protein are not compatible due to the fact that protein waste would easily build up in the blood if taken in sufficient amounts by a kidney disease patient. This would make the body to accumulate more and more waste as the kidney function continues to decline.



It is possible to measure kidney disease patients' protein waste levels in the blood. Doctors use this test to assess how functional the kidneys are. Usually, lower protein diets are prescribed to reduce waste accumulation in the blood of a kidney disease patient. It is believed that for a person with kidney disease, protein intake reduction is very helpful in slowing the severity and progression of the condition.



The vital consideration in determining a kidney disease patient's protein intake is the stage of the kidney condition he or she may be experiencing. The difference in stages is arrived at by determining the amount of blood the patient's kidneys are able to filter. The more the kidneys can filter, the better they are functioning. When blood filtration rates have dropped to the lowest levels and not much blood can be filtered by the kidneys, this is a pointer that the kidneys are barely functional, and a sign of imminent kidney failure. At this stage, dialysis is necessary.



Patients undergoing dialysis are often asked to increase their protein intake. When dialysis is the solution, it means that the kidneys are damaged. The only way to get rid of waste from the body is through dialysis. This means that whether the patient takes in more or limited proteins, it is only through dialysis that any waste will be eliminated from the body. Consequently, it is better for the patient to increase protein intake for a healthy diet because the waste will be removed through dialysis anyway.