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         Renal Disease & Diet:     more books (47)
  1. Assessment of data quality for cost-effectiveness analysis of the Modification of Diet in Renal Disease (MDRD) study by John M Newmann, 1988
  2. A HEALTHY FOOD GUIDE, KIDNEY DISEASE (NATIONAL RENAL DIET) by THE AMERICAN DIETETIC ASSOCIATION, 1993
  3. Diet for patients with renal disease (AFP) by Novella S Hill, 1985
  4. Kopple and Massry's Nutritional Management of Renal Disease
  5. 10 Step Diet & Lifestyle Plan for Healthier Kidneys Avoid Dialysis by Nina Kolbe RD CSR LD, 2009
  6. The Cleveland Clinic Foundation Creative Cooking for Renal Diets by Cleveland Clinic Foundation, 1987-06-01
  7. A Clinical Guide to Nutrition Care in End-Stage Renal Disease by Diane Gillett, Jean Stover, 1987-09
  8. Healthy Eating on a Renal Diet: A Cookbook for People With Kidney Disease by Renal Resource Center, 1991-12
  9. Kidney Health Gourmet Diet Guide and Kidney Friendly Recipes for People Not on Dialysis by Nina Kolbe RD CSR LD, 2010
  10. Dietary Management of Renal Disease by J.S. Cost, 1975-04-03
  11. National Renal Diet: Professional Guide by Renal Dietitians Dietetic Practice Group, 2002-03
  12. Nutrition & Metabolism in Renal Disease: International Society of Renal Nutrition & Metabolism (Journal: Mineral & Electrolyte Metabolis Series, 1-3) by Shaul G. Massry, 1995-10
  13. Nutrition & Metabolism in Renal Disease (Mineral and Electrolyte Metabolism)
  14. Dietary management of renal disease.(1970s)(Recipe): An article from: CANNT Journal by J. Somers, 2008-07-01

1. MEDLINEplus Medical Encyclopedia: Diet - Chronic Kidney Disease
Alternative names renal disease diet; Kidney disease - diet, pre-dialysisdiet, chronic renal failure diet. Definition Return to
http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/article/002442.htm
Skip navigation
Medical Encyclopedia
Other encyclopedia topics: A-Ag Ah-Ap Aq-Az B-Bk ... Z
Diet - chronic kidney disease
Contents of this page: Alternative names Renal disease - diet; Kidney disease - diet, pre-dialysis diet, chronic renal failure diet Definition Return to top This diet is used in the people with abnormal kidney renal function to prevent progression of renal disease. It is usually low in protein and may be low-sodium, and low-potassium. It may also involve fluid restriction. In diabetic patients with renal disease, a low carbohydrate diet may also be used. Function Return to top The purpose of a diet that restricts protein is to decrease the protein load on the kidney and slow down progression of renal disease. Sodium may be restricted to improve blood pressure control and to avoid fluid accumulation. Potassium is restricted because if it is not excreted effectively, it can accumulate and result in dangerous heart rhythms. Food Sources Return to top This diet controls the amount of protein , sodium, and potassium. The controlled amounts of each of these nutrients are based on the person’s blood levels of potassium, sodium, and urea, as well as the fluid balance

2. Renal Disease Resources For Renal Professionals
Professional teaching tools for renal professionals. Offers cards, posters and booklets to help patients Category Health Medicine Medical Specialties Nephrology...... dry, goal or target weight; symptoms of uremia; medications in renal disease;diet in renal disease; hemodialysis and peritoneal dialysis access.
http://www.healthteaching.com/
Renal Insufficiency and End-Stage Renal Disease Resources for Renal Professionals Resources
for Nephrology Professionals
involved in Client Education.
HELP YOUR PATIENTS'
UNDERSTAND the issues
relevant to progressive
renal insufficiency and
End-Stage Renal Disease (ESRD).
Health
Teaching.com

Subscribe
Un-Subscribe Sign up today to receive update. Renal Disease Resources for Renal Professionals Outside North America: E-mail: HealthTeaching .com sales@HealthTeachin g ... .com P.O. Box 336, Brentwood Bay, BC, V8M 1R3, Canada. Renal Insufficiency and End-Stage Renal Disease Resources for Renal Professionals Health Teaching.com is an online resource for renal professionals involved in client education. Healthteaching.com has received recent product reviews in both Dialysis and Transplantation and Nephrology News and Issues A Nephrology nurse has designed these tools and they have been formatted by a professional graphics designer and expertly printed and laminated.

3. Topic: Diet And Renal Disease
Topic diet and renal disease Students will understand that · Our kidneys are important organs responsible for excreting wastes, maintaining blood volume and composition and secretes certain hormones.
http://eastmeadow.k12.ny.us/caps/nutrition/diet%20and%20renal.htm
Topic Diet and Renal Disease Understanding(s):
Students will understand that…
Our kidneys are important organs responsible for excreting wastes, maintaining blood volume and composition and secretes certain hormones. Renal disorders may develop such as acute or chronic renal failure, nephritis, nephrosclerosis, polycystic kidney disease and renal calculi or kidney stones. Dietary treatment of renal disease is important in alleviating problems caused by those disorders. Renal patients need to change their protein needs and restrict sodium, water and potassium. Essential Question(s): Why are our kidneys important? What are some causes of kidney disease? What changes need to be made for a person with renal disease?
Students will know…
The function of our kidneys and the causes of renal disease.
Students will be able to…
Adapt menus for potassium, sodium and water restricted diets. Performance Task(s): Research the different types and causes of kidney stones. Find recipes for patients with renal disease. Other Evidence: Quiz Homework Unit Exam Learning Activities: Plan a diet for a person that is on kidney dialysis.

4. Medications In Renal Failure - Health Teaching.com
The need for medications in renal disease. The role of medications as a partof treating renal disease in addition to dialysis and diet is presented.
http://www.healthteaching.com/medrenal.htm
Posters
Medications in Renal Failure New
This is a 12" x 18" large font, full colour poster addressing some of the more common issues surrounding medication usage in renal disease.
The writer has attempted to provide an overview of the concept of medication use in renal failure without overwhelming the learner.
The poster is divided into four sections:
  • The need for medications in renal disease Factors influencing medication use in renal disease What to discuss with Nephrologist or Renal Pharmacist Types of medication common in renal failure
  • The need for medications in renal disease The role of medications as a part of treating renal disease in addition to dialysis and diet is presented. The role of medications in red blood cell production, blood pressure control and bone health is presented. Factors influencing medication use in renal disease
    • Increased acidity in the stomach Removal of medications via dialysis Build up of medications in the body Need for dosage adjustments in renal disease Drug interactions
    What to discuss with Nephrologist or Renal Pharmacist
    • Any changes in medications What medications to take, how much to take and when to take them

    5. Hypertension Online Slides - Modification Of Diet In Renal Disease, UKPDS, MDRD
    slides in tray 0 Add Search Results to Tray Search Slides. Index of Slide Contents.SLIDE LIBRARY. Search Modification of diet in renal disease Results 1. 1.
    http://www.hypertensiononline.org/slides2/slide01.cfm?q=Modification of Diet in

    6. Hypertension Online Slides - Diet, Renal Disease, Type 1 Diabetes, Proteinuria
    Management of Chronic renal disease Initial diet Therapy. Therapeuticsin Hypertension and renal diseases. National Kidney Foundation
    http://www.hypertensiononline.org/slides2/slide01.cfm?q=diet&pg=2

    7. Diet - Chronic Kidney Disease
    renal disease diet; Kidney disease - diet, pre-dialysis diet, chronic renal failure diet
    http://www.pennhealth.com/ency/article/002442sid.htm
    Disease Injury Nutrition Poison ... Side Effects
    Diet - chronic kidney disease
    Alternative Names: Renal disease - diet; Kidney disease - diet, pre-dialysis diet, chronic renal failure diet
    Side Effects: A low-protein diet can be deficient in some of the essential amino acids , the vitamins niacin thiamine , and riboflavin , and the minerals phosphorus, calcium, and iron. In advanced renal failure, it can lead to malnutrition and should only be implemented under the guidance of a kidney specialist.
    Benefits of implementation:
    This special diet is very helpful as a decreased protein load decreases the stress on the kidney. Nonadherence can increase progression of chronic kidney disease. Support groups: The Kidney Foundation has chapters in most states and is an excellent resource for educational and materials, programs for people with renal disease and their families.
    The kidney specialist should refer you to a registered dietitian who is a good resource for nutrition information specific to kidney disease some are specialists in renal diets.

    8. Diet And Progression Of Renal Disease
    Coyne T, Olson M, Bradham K, Garcon M, Gregory P, Scherch L. dietary satisfactioncorrelated with adherence in the modification of diet in renal disease study.
    http://www.infopoems.com/POEMs/JC069601.htm

    9. Avera Health - Diet - Chronic Kidney Disease
    renal disease diet; Kidney disease - diet, pre-dialysis diet, chronic renal failure diet
    http://www.avera.org/adam/ency/article/002442.htm
    Disease Injury Nutrition Poison ... Side Effects
    Diet - chronic kidney disease
    Definition: This diet is used in the people with abnormal kidney renal function to prevent progression of renal disease. It is usually low in protein and may be low-sodium, and low-potassium. It may also involve fluid restriction. In diabetic patients with renal disease, a low carbohydrate diet may also be used.
    Alternative Names: Renal disease - diet; Kidney disease - diet
    Function: The purpose of a diet that restricts protein is to decrease the protein load on the kidney and slow down progression of renal disease. Sodium may be restricted to improve blood pressure control and to avoid fluid accumulation. Potassium is restricted because if it is not excreted effectively, it can accumulate and result in dangerous heart rhythms.
    Review Date: 2/15/2002
    Reviewed By: Debbie Cohen, M.D., Renal and Electrolyte Division, University of Pennsylvania Medical Center, Philadelphia, PA., and Elizabeth Hait, M.D., Department of Pediatrics, Rainbow Babies and Children's Hospital, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH. Review provided by VeriMed Healthcare Network.

    10. Kidney Disease In Dogs
    Contains a list of breeds in which juvenile renal failure is common. Learn specifics about the disease and about caring for an afflicted dog. symptoms of JRD (juvenile renal disease) have long included a low protein prescription diet. It seems clear, however,
    http://www.geocities.com/Vienna/Opera/2167
    Kidney Disease in Dogs
    George 20 April 1988-
    27 January 1990
    Juvenile renal disease and other familial and congenital renal diseases are seen in more than thirty breeds of dogs. Twenty two of these breeds have a renal dysplasia which is similar to that seen in Standard Poodles. I have put an (RD) for renal dysplasia after their breed names. Even in breeds with the same type of JRD, such as renal dysplasia, the modes of inheritance can be different. Ages at onset of symptoms can vary from a few weeks (Cairn terriers) to 5 - 11 years (German Shepherds, Welsh Corgis, Beagles). Modes of inheritance can vary from X linked dominant (Samoyed) to autosomal recessive (Soft-Coated Wheaten Terrier, Cairn Terrier, Shih-Tzu), autosomal dominant (Bull Terrier), to unknown familial (most of the others). The following breeds are some of those in which familial and other renal diseases are seen:
    • Airedale Terriers (RD)
    • Alaskan Malamutes (RD)
    • Basenjis (Fanconi-like syndrome)
    • Bedlington Terriers (RD)
    • Boxers (RD)
    • Bulldogs (RD)
    • Bull Terriers (glomerulopathy)
    • Cairn Terriers (polycystic kidneys)
    • Chinese Shar-Pei (amyloidosis)
    • Chow Chows (RD)
    • Cocker Spaniels (glomerulopathy)
    • Collies (glomerulopathy)
    • Doberman Pinschers (unilateral agenesis and glomerulopathy)
    • Golden Retrievers (RD)
    • Great Danes (RD)
    • Great Pyrenees (RD)
    • Irish Wolfhounds (RD)
    • Keeshonds (RD)
    • King Charles Spaniels (RD)
    • Lhasa Apso (RD)
    • Miniature Poodles (polycystic kidneys)
    • Miniature Schnauzers (RD and Fanconi-like syndrome)
    • Newfoundlands (glomerulopathy)
    • Norwegian Elkhounds (tubulointerstitial nephropathy and Fanconi-like syndrome

    11. MEDLINEplus Medical Encyclopedia: Kidney Diet - Dialysis Patients
    Alternative names End Stage renal disease diet; Hemodialysis -diet; Peritoneal Dialysis - diet. Definition Return to top This
    http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/article/007135.htm
    Skip navigation
    Medical Encyclopedia
    Other encyclopedia topics: A-Ag Ah-Ap Aq-Az B-Bk ... Z
    Kidney diet - dialysis patients
    Contents of this page: Alternative names End Stage Renal disease - diet; Hemodialysis - diet; Peritoneal Dialysis - diet Definition Return to top This article describes the diet necessary in patients with end-stage renal disease on either hemodialysis or peritoneal dialysis. The diet is usually high in protein and low-sodium, low-potassium, and low-phosphorus. Fluid intake is also restricted. Function Return to top The purpose of this diet is to try and maintain a balance of electrolytes, minerals, and fluid in patients on dialysis. The special diet is important because dialysis alone does not effectively eliminate ALL waste products. These waste products can also accumulate between dialysis treatments. Most dialysis patients urinate very little or not at all, and therefore fluid restriction between treatments is very important. Without urination, fluid will accumulate and result in volume overload with excess fluid in the heart, lungs and ankles. Patients on dialysis need a high protein intake to maintain adequate nutrition. Patients can become malnourished on dialysis and poor nutrition can often predict poor outcomes.

    12. Canine Renal Disease
    informative only. I am not a veterinarian, and do not endorse any particulartreatment or diet for dogs with renal disease. The only
    http://www.geocities.com/HotSprings/Falls/9065/

    Internet Explorer users click here for Explorer preferred mirror site
    Canine Renal Disease
    George 20 April 1988-
    27 January 1990
    Juvenile renal disease and other familial and congenital renal diseases are seen in more than thirty breeds of dogs. Twenty two of these breeds have a renal dysplasia which is similar to that seen in Standard Poodles. I have put an (RD) for renal dysplasia after their breed names. Even in breeds with the same type of JRD, such as renal dysplasia, the modes of inheritance can be different. Ages at onset of symptoms can vary from a few weeks (Cairn terriers) to 5 - 11 years (German Shepherds, Welsh Corgis, Beagles). Modes of inheritance can vary from X linked dominant (Samoyed) to autosomal recessive (Soft-Coated Wheaten Terrier, Cairn Terrier, Shih-Tzu), autosomal dominant (Bull Terrier), to unknown familial (most of the others). The following breeds are some of those in which familial and other renal diseases are seen:
    • Airedale Terriers (RD)
    • Alaskan Malamutes (RD)
    • Basenjis (Fanconi-like syndrome)
    • Bedlington Terriers (RD)
    • Boxers (RD)
    • Bulldogs (RD)
    • Bull Terriers (glomerulopathy)
    • Cairn Terriers (polycystic kidneys)
    • Chinese Shar-Pei (amyloidosis)
    • Chow Chows (RD)
    • Cocker Spaniels (glomerulopathy)
    • Collies (glomerulopathy)
    • Doberman Pinschers (unilateral agenesis and glomerulopathy)
    • Golden Retrievers (RD)
    • Great Danes (RD)
    • Great Pyrenees (RD)
    • Irish Wolfhounds (RD)
    • Keeshonds (RD)
    • King Charles Spaniels (RD)
    • Lhasa Apso (RD)
    • Miniature Poodles (polycystic kidneys)
    • Miniature Schnauzers (RD and Fanconi-like syndrome)

    13. Diet - Chronic Kidney Disease
    disease Injury Nutrition Poison Special Topic Surgery Symptoms Test A B C D E F G H I K L M N P R S T V W Z Overview Food Sources Recommendations Side Effects diet chronic kidney disease Alternative Names renal disease - diet; Kidney disease -
    http://www.iowaclinic.com/adam/ency/article/002442sid.shtml

    Disease
    Injury Nutrition Poison ... Side Effects
    Diet - chronic kidney disease
    Alternative Names: Renal disease - diet; Kidney disease - diet, pre-dialysis diet, chronic renal failure diet
    Side Effects: A low-protein diet can be deficient in some of the essential amino acids , the vitamins niacin thiamine , and riboflavin , and the minerals phosphorus, calcium, and iron. In advanced renal failure, it can lead to malnutrition and should only be implemented under the guidance of a kidney specialist.
    Benefits of implementation:
    This special diet is very helpful as a decreased protein load decreases the stress on the kidney. Nonadherence can increase progression of chronic kidney disease. Support groups: The Kidney Foundation has chapters in most states and is an excellent resource for educational and materials, programs for people with renal disease and their families.
    The kidney specialist should refer you to a registered dietitian who is a good resource for nutrition information specific to kidney disease some are specialists in renal diets.

    14. Canine Kidney Disease
    But not every dog with kidney disease needs such a diet. renal Failure diets(theseare some suggestions-but your veterinarian may have others).
    http://www.cah.com/library/caninekidney.html
    Canine Kidney Disease
    Canine Kidney Disease The kidney (fig. normal kidney ultrasound kidney Let us picture the kidneys filtering mechanism. There are tens of thousands of microscopic funnel shaped tubes called nephrons. These tiny structures are responsible for filtering and reabsorbing the fluids that balance the body. These nephrons are susceptible to damage due to many causes such as poisons, aging, infection, trauma, cancer, auto-immune diseases, and genetic predisposition. If any of these occur the entire nephron stops functioning. Fortunately, due to both the reserve capacity of the kidney and the ability of the nephrons to grow larger, the kidney can still function. If damage to nephrons occurs gradually and the surviving nephrons have enough time to hypertrophy, a kidney can continue to function with as few as 25 percent of its original nephrons. When the number of functioning nephrons drops below 25 percent or when damage occurs too suddenly for the remaining nephrons to compensate, kidney failure occurs. There are two types of kidney failure. Acute kidney failure is a sudden loss of function that is sometimes but not always reversible. Chronic kidney failure is an irreversible loss of function that occurs gradually over months or years. Initial test results can be remarkably similar for both forms of kidney failure. The diagnostic challenge is to determine whether the dog has acute or chronic kidney failure. Making the distinction between chronic and acute failure is crucial because the prognosis and duration of treatment for the two types of kidney disease are different (although some treatment procedures may be similar). At our practices, we recommend yearly base line lab testing starting at age 3. This protocol allows us to help determine if we are dealing with acute or chronic disease.

    15. JRD In Standard Poodles
    In addition to diet, IV fluids can be administered to correct disturbances they aredoing well, ultrasound has revealed that their renal disease affects both
    http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Hills/9709/jrdsusanfleisher.html
    Juvenile Renal Disease in Standard Poodles
    revised and updated June 1997 Introduction
    Symptoms
    Diagnosis
    Management
    References Introduction In January of 1990, I had my twenty one month old Standard Poodle put down. She was one of three puppies in a litter of eleven to die of juvenile renal disease (JRD). All three of the puppies with the disease appeared healthy and grew normally until clinical signs appeared at ten months in one, and twenty months in the other two. The disease is devastating. Nobody expects to lose a puppy of that age. After her death, I began searching the literature to discover what was known about JRD in Standard Poodles, including what, if any, research was being done in order to establish the mode of inheritance of this disease in this breed. After finding only one paper in the veterinary literature on juvenile renal disease in Standard Poodles (1), and discovering that no one was currently working on this problem, I began a collaboration with George Padgett, DVM, geneticist and Professor of Pathology at Michigan State University. Our objective is to establish the mode of inheritance of JRD in Standard Poodles, and an eventual open registry at the Institute for Genetic Disease Control in Animals (GDC), in Davis, California. Using an open registry, breeders who wish to can reduce the incidence of this disease, if not breed it out entirely. The information I have gathered since then leads me to believe that most individual cases of JRD are treated by owners and veterinarians as isolated occurrences rather than as the manifestation of a genetic disease. If the breeder is informed about a medical problem in a puppy she has sold, and often she is not, or, if just the owner of the dam is informed, and it is only one puppy in a litter about whom she is informed, it is again treated as an isolated incident. Unless there are multiples in a litter it goes largely unrecognized, and no recognition is made nor thought given to those littermates who are carriers.

    16. Diet - Chronic Kidney Disease
    used. Alternative Names renal disease diet; Kidney disease - diet,pre-dialysis diet, chronic renal failure diet. Function The
    http://www.pennhealth.com/ency/article/002442.htm
    Disease Injury Nutrition Poison ... Side Effects
    Diet - chronic kidney disease
    Definition: This diet is used in the people with abnormal kidney renal function to prevent progression of renal disease. It is usually low in protein and may be low-sodium, and low-potassium. It may also involve fluid restriction. In diabetic patients with renal disease, a low carbohydrate diet may also be used.
    Alternative Names: Renal disease - diet; Kidney disease - diet, pre-dialysis diet, chronic renal failure diet
    Function: The purpose of a diet that restricts protein is to decrease the protein load on the kidney and slow down progression of renal disease. Sodium may be restricted to improve blood pressure control and to avoid fluid accumulation. Potassium is restricted because if it is not excreted effectively, it can accumulate and result in dangerous heart rhythms.
    Review Date: 2/15/2002
    Reviewed By: Debbie Cohen, M.D., Renal and Electrolyte Division, University of Pennsylvania Medical Center, Philadelphia, PA., and Elizabeth Hait, M.D., Department of Pediatrics, Rainbow Babies and Children's Hospital, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH. Review provided by VeriMed Healthcare Network.

    17. Soyfoods In Chronic Renal Disease
    Chumlea WC, Gassman J, Hollinger DL, Maroni BJ, Merrill D, Scherch LK, Shulman G,Wang S, Zimmer GS, for the Modification of diet in renal disease Study Group.
    http://www.soyfoods.com/symposium98/FantiPaper98.html

    Third Annual

    Soyfoods Symposium

    Proceedings
    Soyfoods in Chronic Renal Disease by Dr. Paolo Fanti , MD, University of Kentucky Soy is gaining popularity as a food item for human consumption in the U.S., in part because of a shift in interest of the American public toward plant food and in part because of the hypothesized health effects of soybeans. Reportedly, there are 26 million soyfoods consumers in this country. Our understanding of the potential impact of the introduction of soyfoods in the diet of patients with renal disease is in its infancy. However, integrated analysis of the current knowledge about the nutritional properties of soy, the metabolic derangement and dietary requirements of patients with kidney disease, and the handful of studies that have specifically addressed the issue of soyfoods utilization in renal disease, allow one to speculate in optimistic terms about the potential beneficial effects of soyfoods in renal patients. References (1) J Am Soc Nephrol 8(suppl 9):1-33, 1997.

    18. 1Up Health > Diet - Chronic Kidney Disease > Function (Kidney Disease - Diet, Pr
    Comprehesive information on diet chronic kidney disease (Kidney disease - diet,pre-dialysis diet, chronic renal failure diet, renal disease - diet).
    http://www.1uphealth.com/health/diet_chronic_kidney_disease_info.html
    1Up Health Diet - chronic kidney disease Alternative Medicine Clinical Trials ... Health Topics A-Z Search 1Up Health Diet - chronic kidney disease Information Diet - chronic kidney disease : Function Alternative names : Kidney disease - diet, pre-dialysis diet, chronic renal failure diet, Renal disease - diet Definition : This diet is used in the people with abnormal kidney renal function to prevent progression of renal disease. It is usually low in protein and may be low-sodium, and low-potassium. It may also involve fluid restriction. In diabetic patients with renal disease, a low carbohydrate diet may also be used.
    Function
    The purpose of a diet that restricts protein is to decrease the protein load on the kidney and slow down progression of renal disease. Sodium may be restricted to improve blood pressure control and to avoid fluid accumulation. Potassium is restricted because if it is not excreted effectively, it can accumulate and result in dangerous heart rhythms.
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    19. Health Ency.: Nutrition: Diet - Chronic Kidney Disease
    Alternative names renal disease diet; Kidney disease - diet, pre-dialysisdiet, chronic renal failure diet. Definition A diet
    http://www.accessatlanta.com/shared/health/adam/ency/article/002442.html
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    Ency. home Nutrition D Diet - chronic kidney disease Overview Recommendations Side Effects Food Sources Alternative names: Renal disease - diet; Kidney disease - diet, pre-dialysis diet, chronic renal failure diet Definition: A diet used in the people with abnormal kidney renal function to prevent progression of renal disease. It is usually low in protein and may be low-sodium, and low-potassium. It may also involve fluid restriction. In diabetic patients with renal disease a low carbohydrate diet may also be used. Functions The purpose of a diet that restricts protein is to decrease the protein load on the kidney and slow down progression of renal disease. Sodium may be restricted to improve blood pressure control and to avoid fluid accumulation. Potassium is restricted because if it is not excreted effectively it can accumulate and result in dangerous heart rhythms. Ency. home Nutrition D Please read this Important notice
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    20. End-Stage Renal Disease: Choosing A Treatment That's Right For You
    This etext is for people whose kidneys fail to work. This condition is called end-stagerenal disease (ESRD). It also discusses diet and paying for treatment.
    http://www.niddk.nih.gov/health/kidney/pubs/esrd/esrd.htm


    This e-text is for people whose kidneys fail to work. This condition is called end-stage renal disease (ESRD). Today, there are new and better treatments for ESRD that replace the work of healthy kidneys. By learning about your treatment choices, you can work with your doctor to pick the one that's best for you. No matter which type of treatment you choose, there will be some changes in your life. But with the help of your health care team, family, and friends, you may be able to lead a full, active life. This e-text describes the choices for treatment: hemodialysis, peritoneal dialysis, and kidney transplantation. It gives the pros and cons of each. It also discusses diet and paying for treatment. It gives tips for working with your doctor, nurses, and others who make up your health care team. It provides a list of groups that offer information and services to kidney patients. It also lists magazines, books, and brochures that you can read for more information about treatment. You and your doctor will work together to choose a treatment that's best for you. This e-text can help you make that choice.

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