Quality or Quantity of Proteins in the Diet for CKD Patients: Does “Junk Food” Make a Difference? Lessons from a High-Risk Pregnancy

Author:

Orozco-Guillien Alejandra Oralia,Muñoz-Manrique Cinthya,Reyes-López Maria Angelica,Perichat-Perera Otilia,Miranda-Araujo Osvaldo,D’Alessandro Claudia,Piccoli Giorgina B.

Abstract

<b><i>Background:</i></b> How to manage patients with severe kidney disease in pregnancy is still a matter of discussion, and deciding if and when to start dialysis is based on the specialist’s experience and dialysis availability. The effect of toxic substances usually cleared by the kidney may be more severe and readily evident. The review, and related case, underlines the importance of considering the presence of additives in food in delicate conditions, such as CKD pregnancy. <b><i>The Case:</i></b> A 39-year-old indigenous woman from a low-resourced area in Mexico was referred to the obstetric nephrology at 25 gestational weeks because of serum creatinine at 3.6 mg/dL, hypertension on low-dose alpha-methyl-dopa, and nephrotic-range proteinuria. Kidney ultrasounds showed small poorly differentiated kidneys; foetal ultrasounds detected a female foetus, normal for gestational age. The patient’s baseline protein intake, which was estimated at 1.2–1.3 g/kg/day, was mostly of animal-origin (&#x3e;70%) poor-quality food (“junk food”). In the proposed diet, protein intake was only slightly reduced (1.0–1.2 g/kg/day), but the source of proteins was changed (only 30% of animal origin) with attention to food quality. A remarkable decrease in BUN was observed, in concomitance with adequate dietary follow-up, with rapid rise of BUN when the patient switched temporarily back to previous habits. A healthy female baby weighing 2,460 g (11th centile for gestational age) was delivered at 37 gestational weeks. <b><i>Discussion and Literature Review:</i></b> While data on patients with chronic kidney disease are scant, the long list of contaminants present in food, especially if of low quality, should lead us to reflect on their potential negative effect on kidney function and make us realize that eating healthy, unprocessed “organic” food should be encouraged, in delicate conditions such as pregnancy and breastfeeding and for young children, in particular when kidney function is failing. The case herein described gave us the opportunity to reflect on the importance of diet quality and on the potential risks linked to food additives, many of which, including phosphates and potassium, are not declared on food labels, while others, including dyes, antioxidants, thickeners, emulsifiers, and preservatives, are qualitatively, but not quantitatively, reported.

Publisher

S. Karger AG

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Nephrology,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Nephrology

Reference50 articles.

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