1 in 10 people in the UK have ?
1 in 10 people in the UK have CKD
What is the typical age range of people with CKD?
Typical age range of peoeple with CKD:
65-74
Where does 65% of AKI start?
65% of AKI starts in the community
1 in 5 emergency hospital admissions have ?
1 in 5 emergency hospital admissions have AKI
What do Specialist Kidney dietitians typically do?
Specialist Kidney dietitians usually treat:
* Patients that require renal replacement therapy (RRT): e.g. dialysis
* Patients with AKI that need RRT
What do general dietitians usually do?
General dietitians usually:
* Treat patients with CKD
* Treat patients with AKI
* Prevention, health promotion, public health, policy, industry
Diet aims for DIALYSIS, PREDIALYSIS & AKI
Diet aims for DIALYSIS, PREDIALYSIS & AKI:
* Control fluid overload
* Control high blood potassium
* Control high blood phosphate
What are the 2 electrolytes that are the target of dietary modification in DIALYSIS, PREDIALYSIS & AKI?
electrolytes that are the target of dietary modification in DIALYSIS, PREDIALYSIS & AK:
* Potassium (K)
* Phosphate (PO4)
Nutritional advice for Early CKD, Prevention of CKD, Prevention of AKI
Nutritional Advice for Early CKD, Prevention of CKD, Prevention of AKI:
* Healthy eating
* Low processed foods
* Low salt
* High F&V
* High intake of nuts&seeds
* High intake of fish
* Pulses to replace meat
* High quality, non processed meats
* Dietary patterns: MED DIET, NORDIC DIET, DASH DIET.
* AKI: Protect fluid intake
Contributing causes of CKD
Contributing causes of CKD:
* Diabetic nephropathy
* HTN
* Infection
* Nephrotic syndrome: large amounts of protein leak into the urine, causing fluid retention and swelling.
* Polycystic kidney disease
* Tumour
* Genetics
* Idiopathic
Contributing causes of AKI
Contributing causes of AKI:
* Hypovolaemia
* Heart failure
* Sepsis
* MOF
* Acute glomerulonrephritis: inflammation of the tiny filters in the kidneys (glomeruli)
* Toxic reaction (poison, drugs)
* Urinary output obstruction
Main functions of the kidneys
Main functions of the kidneys:
* Blood filtration
* Waste removal
* Blood pressure regulation
* Electrolyte balance
* Fluid balance
* Acid-base balance
* RBC production
* Vit D activation
* Excretion of drugs & toxins
What do the kidneys do? (Lecture slide)
What the kidneys do (Lecture slide):
* Pass all of our blood through 40x/day
* Make 180L of glomerular filtrate per day
* Reabsorb 99% of filtrate in the tubules
* Have 145 miles of filtering tubes
* Take 20-25% of the cardiac output
* Use 25% of energy
Name the things that can damage the kidneys over time
Things that can damage the kidneys over time:
* Poisons e.g. ethylene glycol crystals
* Products of metabolism e.g. acid load
* Excess nutrients e.g. phosphate, vitamin c (oxalate can cause kidney stones)
* NSAIDS: cause inflammation in tubules> fail to maintain blood flow to nephron by inhibition of prostaglandin production
Prevention of kidney disease nutrition
Prevention of kidney disease nutrition
* DASH DIET
* MED DIET
* NEW NORDIC STYLE DIET
* Low processed foods
* Low salt
* Rich in F&V
* Rich in seeds & nuts
* Rich in fish
* Pulses to replace some meat
Hansrivijit et al. 2020 “Mediterranean diet and the risk of chronic kidney disease: A systematic review and meta-analysis”
Hansrivijit et al. 2020 “Mediterranean diet and the risk of chronic kidney disease: A systematic review and meta-analysis”
* 9 prospective observational studies (2010-2019) with 18519 participants
* Using the MeDiterranean diet Score scoring system, The MED diet was found to reduce CKD risk by 10%
* MED diet: reduces creatinine levels (serum)
* MED diet: stabilizes eGFR
* High consumption of: F&V, olive oil, moderate wine lowers inflammation & oxidative stress
* High fibre: inversely correlates with mortality and inflammatory markers in CKD subpopulation
* A prospective RCT and PREVEND study showed: consumption of 2 to 3 glasses of white wine per day was associated with decreased CRP, IL-6 levels, proteinuria and increased eGFR.
Pros:
* Used validated scoring system: MDS
* Included studies of all languages
* All community subjects
Limitations:
* Small number of observational studies: 4 were suitable for meta-analysis
* Excluded other scoring systems for mediterranean diet adherence
* No UK studies included: how applicable to UK population?
Quintela et al. (2021) “Dietary patterns and chronic kidney disease outcomes: A systematic review”
Name the disrupted kidney functions that can be treated with diet
The disrupted kidney functions that can be treated with diet:
* Blood pressure: no added salt restriction/ fluid restriction
* Fluid balance: fluid restriction/ salt restriction
* Electrolytes: potassium control
* Bone metabolism: phosphate control
* Toxins: nutritional support/ lower protein diets?
* Acid/base balance: plant based diets
We are born with ? times more kidney function than we actually need
We are born with 3 times more kidney function than we actually need
What does kidney function decline with?
Kidney function declines with age
Creatinine is a marker of ? ?
Creatinine is a marker of kidney function. High creatinine is an indicator of kidney issues.
When does creatinine rise?
Creatinine rises when there is only 1 THIRD of capacity left
There could be loss of 2 THIRDS of kidney function and creatinine would be ?
There could be loss of 2 THIRDS of kidney function and creatinine would be normal
How is blood pressure treated by diet?