Restriction of dietary protein and progression of renal failure in diabetic nephropathy
Autor: | Harry Keen, R. A. Dodds, Gc Viberti, J D Walker, Martin B Mattock, J J Bending, T. J. Murrells |
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Rok vydání: | 1989 |
Předmět: |
Adult
medicine.medical_specialty Diet therapy Serum albumin Renal function Blood Pressure Nephropathy Diabetic nephropathy Diabetes mellitus Internal medicine medicine Humans Diabetic Nephropathies Prospective Studies Antihypertensive Agents Serum Albumin Clinical Trials as Topic Proteinuria biology business.industry General Medicine Middle Aged medicine.disease Blood pressure Endocrinology Diabetes Mellitus Type 1 Evaluation Studies as Topic biology.protein Dietary Proteins medicine.symptom business Follow-Up Studies Glomerular Filtration Rate |
Zdroj: | Lancet (London, England). 2(8677) |
ISSN: | 0140-6736 |
Popis: | In a study of the effect of a low-protein diet on the progression of renal disease 19 insulin-dependent diabetic patients with persistent clinical proteinuria were observed for 12-39 (mean 29) months while they were on a normal-protein diet (1.13 [0.06] g/kg per day), then for 12-49 (mean 33) months on a low-protein diet (0.67 [0.03] g/kg per day). The low-protein diet had no adverse effect on nutrition or glycosylated haemoglobin concentration. Mean supine blood pressure (BP) fell slightly on the low-protein diet and was probably due to the start or modification of antihypertensive medication in 9 patients. The mean rate of decline in glomerular filtration rate fell from 0.61 (SEM 0.14) ml/min per month with the normal-protein diet to 0.14 (0.08) with the low-protein diet, and this effect remained highly significant after adjustment for blood pressure, energy intake, and glycosylated haemoglobin. The rise in the fractional clearance of albumin during a normal-protein diet stopped with the low-protein diet, and there was a significant fall in albumin excretion from 467 (95% CI 234-895) micrograms/24 h on the normal-protein to 340 (138-719) on the low-protein diet. Thus, a low-protein diet, with its reduction in protein and possibly other dietary components such as phosphate or fat, seems to retard the rate of decline of glomerular filtration rate in diabetic nephropathy independently of blood pressure changes and glycaemic control. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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