| Literature DB >> 25713712 |
Giorgina Barbara Piccoli1, Federica Neve Vigotti1, Filomena Leone2, Irene Capizzi1, Germana Daidola3, Gianfranca Cabiddu4, Paolo Avagnina5.
Abstract
Low-protein diets (LPDs) have encountered various fortunes, and several questions remain open. No single study, including the famous Modification of Diet in Renal Disease, was conclusive and even if systematic reviews are in favour of protein restriction, at least in non-diabetic adults, implementation is lagging. LPDs are considered difficult, malnutrition is a threat and compliance is poor. LPDs have been reappraised in this era of reconsideration of dialysis indications and timing. The definition of a normal-adequate protein diet has shifted in the overall population from 1 to 1.2 to 0.8 g/kg/day. Vegan-vegetarian diets are increasingly widespread, thus setting the groundwork for easier integration of moderate protein restriction in Chronic Kidney Disease. There are four main moderately restricted LPDs (0.6 g/kg/day). Two of them require careful planning of quantity and quality of food: a 'traditional' one, with mixed proteins that works on the quantity and quality of food and a vegan one, which integrates grains and legumes. Two further options may be seen as a way to simplify LPDs while being on the safe side for malnutrition: adding supplements of essential amino and keto acids (various doses) allows an easier shift from omnivorous to vegan diets, while protein-free food intake allows for an increase in calories. Very-low-protein diets (vLPDs: 0.3 g/kg/day) combine both approaches and usually require higher doses of supplements. Moderately restricted LPDs may be adapted to virtually any cuisine and should be tailored to the patients' preferences, while vLPDs usually require trained, compliant patients; a broader offer of diet options may lead to more widespread use of LPDs, without competition among the various schemas.Entities:
Keywords: CKD; compliance; keto acids and amino acids; low-protein diets; very-low-protein diets
Year: 2014 PMID: 25713712 PMCID: PMC4310428 DOI: 10.1093/ckj/sfu125
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Kidney J ISSN: 2048-8505
Characteristics of the main LPDs, defined according to protein content
| Diet definition | Type of proteins | Scheme | Advantages—problems | Supplements protein-free food |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Moderate protein restriction: 0.6 g/kg/day | ||||
| ‘Traditional’ LPD | 0.6 g/kg/day, mixed, with at least 50% of animal origin (or ‘high biological value’) | The diet requires adaptation to the local habits; 30–35 kcal/kg are reached by implementing protein-poor calorie-rich natural food (for example, rice, potatoes, tapioca, fruit, oil and butter) | Advantage: no supplement or special food needed; limits: skilled dietician is needed. The caloric intake may be difficult to reach in particular in ‘small’ patients | None |
| Vegan LPD | 0.6 g/kg/day, vegetable origin | This diet is strictly vegan; it is based upon a combination of different proteins of vegetable origin, mainly in grains, legumes and soy protein | Advantage: no supplement or special food are needed; limits: the combination of legumes and cereals at each meal is demanding. May not be suited to patients with diverticulosis or intestinal problems | None |
| Vegan supplemented with keto and amino acids | 0.6 g/kg/day, vegetable origin | This diet is strictly vegan; it may be based upon forbidden (all food of animal origin) and allowed food (all food of vegetable origin). Supplements allow integration without need for combining grains and legumes at each meal | Advantage: simplified scheme based upon allowed and forbidden food; may be used in patients who do not like or tolerate legumes. Limits: need for supplementation of many pills (free of charge only in a few countries). | Alpha-keto acids and amino acids, min: 1:10, max 1:5 kg BW |
| LPD with protein-free food | 0.6 g/kg/day, mixed origin | Cereals are all or in part replaced by protein-free food (mainly pasta and bread). This allows moderate quantities of proteins of animal origin | Advantage: no need to drastically change food habits. Problems: easily integrated in Mediterranean diets, less in Northern diets. Limited availability (high cost) of protein-free food in several countries. | Protein-free food |
| vLPD: 0.3 g/kg/day | ||||
| vLPD-vegan supplemented | 0.3 g/kg/day, vegetable origin | This diet is strictly vegan; it may be based upon forbidden (all food of animal origin) and allowed food (all food of vegetable origin). More easily carried out if bread and pasta are substituted with protein-free food. | Advantage: probably more effective in postponing dialysis. Problems: requires separate cooking, is monotonous and requires a high number of pills. Limited availability (high cost) of protein-free food in several countries. | Alpha-keto acids and amino acids, 1:5 kg BW; optional: protein-free food. |
In pregnancy: 0.6–0.8 LPD–vegan vegetarian—supplemented: mainly vegetable proteins; small doses of milk and yogurt allowed. Alpha-keto acids and amino acids 1:8–10 kg BW in the first trimester, increased to 1:5–8 kg BW in the last.
Energy, minerals and vitamins in the different LPDs
| ‘Traditional’ LPD | LPD with protein-free food | Vegan LPD | Vegan supplemented with keto and amino acids | VLPD-vegan supplemented | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Calories | 30–35 kg body weight: this is the most crucial point to avoid protein malnutrition, in particular in elderly patients with cardiovascular disease (MIA syndrome); this is a basic prescription for all LPD; the risk of hyper-catabolism may increase in ‘very low’ protein diets | |||||
| Calcium | Calcium is usually added | Calcium is contained in the supplements; further addition may not be routinely needed | ||||
| Phosphate | Phosphate content strictly depends upon the quota of animal proteins. It may be increased if canned, preserved or frozen foods are employed | Phosphate content is usually low in vegan diets, in particular if only fresh food is used. Bioavailability of vegetable phosphate may be different. Readily bioavailable phosphate may be remarkably increased if canned or frozen food is routinely consumed (usually frozen vegetables and canned legumes) | ||||
| Vit D | Supplementation is commonly needed; however the quota of animal proteins may protect from severe deficits | Vitamin D is commonly needed; bioavailable vit D is less represented in vegetable-based products | ||||
| Folate | Supplementation may be needed if the patient eats low quantities of fresh fruits and vegetables | Supplementation usually not needed if fresh food is used | ||||
| B12 | Supplementation may be needed; however, the quota of animal proteins usually protects from severe deficits | Supplementation is commonly needed; B12 deficit is particularly prevalent and may lead to severe problems in vegan–vegetarian pregnancy | ||||
| Iron | Supplementation is commonly needed; however, the quota of animal proteins may protect from severe deficits | Supplementation is usually needed; the bioavailability of vegetable iron is usually lower, even if well-designed vegan diets are not necessarily associated with a deficit in iron | ||||
We did not consider in this review the intake of two main nutrients: sodium and potassium, on the account of their dependence from several other elements, including, for the former the type of disease (interstitial versus vascular or glomerular nephropathy), the blood pressure level and the anti-hypertensive therapy, and for the latter the acidosis status, the use of diuretics and the eventual potassium-containing food additives.
Fig. 1.A diet flowchart and counseling tips.