Fibre Intake in Chronic Kidney Disease: What Fibre Should We Recommend? (bibtex)
by Secundino Cigarrán Guldris, Juan Antonio Latorre Catalá, Ana Sanjurjo Amado, Nicolás Menéndez Granados and Eva Piñeiro Varela
Abstract:
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is a major global health problem that challenges all patients' healthcare needs. Fibre consumption benefits kidney patients by acting preventively on associated risk factors, improving intestinal microbiota composition or reducing metabolic acidosis and inflammation. In this review, we focus on increasing fibre consumption and the quality of fibre to recommend, in addition to increasing the consumption of foods that naturally have it in their design, that can resort to fortified foods or fibre supplements. The Western nutritional practice, which is low in fibre and rich in animal proteins, saturated fats, sodium, and sugar, increases the risk of mortality in these patients. On the contrary, patterns with higher consumption of fibre and vegetable proteins, such as the Mediterranean, vegetarian, or Plant dominant low protein diet (PLADO), seem to have a preventive effect on the associated risk factors and influence CKD progression. Until now, the use of fibre supplements has not achieved an evident impact on clinical results. Fibre-rich foods contain other nutrients that reduce cardiovascular risk. Promoting diets richer in vegetables and guaranteeing adequate energy and protein intake is a challenge for the multidisciplinary teams involved in the standard of care for CKD.
Reference:
Fibre Intake in Chronic Kidney Disease: What Fibre Should We Recommend? (Secundino Cigarrán Guldris, Juan Antonio Latorre Catalá, Ana Sanjurjo Amado, Nicolás Menéndez Granados and Eva Piñeiro Varela), In Nutrients, volume 14, 2022.
Bibtex Entry:
@article{Cigarran-Guldris:2022aa,
	abstract = {Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is a major global health problem that challenges all patients' healthcare needs. Fibre consumption benefits kidney patients by acting preventively on associated risk factors, improving intestinal microbiota composition or reducing metabolic acidosis and inflammation. In this review, we focus on increasing fibre consumption and the quality of fibre to recommend, in addition to increasing the consumption of foods that naturally have it in their design, that can resort to fortified foods or fibre supplements. The Western nutritional practice, which is low in fibre and rich in animal proteins, saturated fats, sodium, and sugar, increases the risk of mortality in these patients. On the contrary, patterns with higher consumption of fibre and vegetable proteins, such as the Mediterranean, vegetarian, or Plant dominant low protein diet (PLADO), seem to have a preventive effect on the associated risk factors and influence CKD progression. Until now, the use of fibre supplements has not achieved an evident impact on clinical results. Fibre-rich foods contain other nutrients that reduce cardiovascular risk. Promoting diets richer in vegetables and guaranteeing adequate energy and protein intake is a challenge for the multidisciplinary teams involved in the standard of care for CKD.},
	author = {Cigarr{\'a}n Guldris, Secundino and Latorre Catal{\'a}, Juan Antonio and Sanjurjo Amado, Ana and Men{\'e}ndez Granados, Nicol{\'a}s and Pi{\~n}eiro Varela, Eva},
	date-added = {2023-06-10 13:59:19 +0100},
	date-modified = {2023-06-10 14:00:37 +0100},
	doi = {10.3390/nu14204419},
	journal = {Nutrients},
	journal-full = {Nutrients},
	keywords = {Fibre},
	mesh = {Animals; Dietary Fiber; Renal Insufficiency, Chronic; Diet; Plant Proteins, Dietary; Sodium; Sugars},
	month = {Oct},
	number = {20},
	pmc = {PMC9612304},
	pmid = {36297103},
	pst = {epublish},
	title = {Fibre Intake in Chronic Kidney Disease: What Fibre Should We Recommend?},
	volume = {14},
	year = {2022},
	bdsk-url-1 = {https://doi.org/10.3390/nu14204419}}
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