Literature DB >> 10196003

Role of fermentable carbohydrate supplements with a low-protein diet in the course of chronic renal failure: experimental bases.

H Younes1, J C Alphonse, S R Behr, C Demigné, C Rémésy.   

Abstract

During the past few years, considerable attention has been given to the impact of nutrition on kidney disease. The question arises of whether the effect of a moderate dietary protein restriction could be reinforced by enrichment of the diet with fermentable carbohydrates. Feeding fermentable carbohydrates may stimulate the extrarenal route of nitrogen (N) excretion through the fecal route. Such an effect has been reported in several species, including healthy humans and patients with chronic renal failure (CRF). Furthermore, studies of these subjects show that the greater fecal N excretion during the fermentable carbohydrate supplementation period was accompanied by a significant decrease in plasma urea concentration. In animal models of experimental renal failure, the consumption of diets containing fermentable carbohydrates results in a greater rate of urea N transfer from blood to the cecal lumen, where it is hydrolyzed by bacterial urease before subsequent microflora metabolism and proliferation. Therefore, this results in a greater fecal N excretion, coupled with a reduction in urinary N excretion and plasma urea concentration. Because elevated concentrations of serum urea N have been associated with adverse clinical symptoms of CRF, these results suggest a possible usefulness of combining fermentable carbohydrates with a low-protein diet to increase N excretion through the fecal route. Further investigations in this population of patients of whether fermentable carbohydrates in the diet may be beneficial in delaying or treating the symptoms and chronic complications of CRF will certainly emerge in the future. This should be realized without adversely affecting nutritional status and, as far as possible, by optimizing protein intake for the patients without being detrimental to renal function.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10196003     DOI: 10.1016/s0272-6386(99)70213-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Kidney Dis        ISSN: 0272-6386            Impact factor:   8.860


  7 in total

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  7 in total

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