| Literature DB >> 35755525 |
Elmukhtar Habas1, Mehdi Errayes1, Eshrak Habas2, Khalifa L Farfar3, Gamal Alfitori1, Ala E Habas4, Amnna Rayani5, Abdel-Naser Y Elzouki6.
Abstract
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is a common disease in the Islamic regions. Dehydration occurs after prolonged fasting, particularly in hot and humid climates. In the Arabic months' calendar, Ramadan is a month of maximum given deeds, where Muslims are required to fast from dawn till sunset. Depending on where you live and when the Ramadan month falls, fasting might last anywhere from 10 to 20 hours or more. In certain circumstances, such as poorly controlled diabetes and advanced CKD patients who are allowed to break their fast, the Ramadan fasting amendment is viable. Some Muslims, however, continue fasting despite these circumstances, placing themselves at risk, which is not allowed in the Islamic religion. There are no medical recommendations that specify who should and should not fast. Nonetheless, the recommendations have been extracted from several published studies. The authors searched EMBASE, PubMed, Google Scholar, and Google for publications, research, and reviews. All authors debate and analyze the related articles. Each author was assigned a part or two of the topics to read, study, and summarize before creating the final draft of their given section. Then this comprehensive review was completed after discussion sessions. In conclusion, by the Islamic religion view, fasting Ramadan is mandatory for every wise adult person. People who have chronic diseases or that may deteriorate by fasting are exempted from fasting. It seems that fasting and the associated disease hours are determinant factors to fasting or not fasting. Up to our knowledge, there are no established guidelines for CKD patients and physicians to follow; however, the International Diabetes Federation and Diabetes and Ramadan (IDF-DAR) Practical Guidelines 2021 have been issued for CKD diabetic patients and fasting.Entities:
Keywords: ckd patients and ramadan; dialysis and fasting; dialysis and fasting ramadan; fasting and ckd; kidney transplantation and ramadan; ramadan
Year: 2022 PMID: 35755525 PMCID: PMC9218841 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.25269
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Published articles summary of CKD and Ramadan fasting
Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD), Estimated Glomerular Filtration Rate (eGFR), Hypertension (HTN), Acute Renal Failure (ARF)
| Authors/Year | Kidney serum parameters | Remarks | Conclusion |
| Bragazzi [ | No significant reduction in eGFR | Cold weather does not improve eGFR | More studies required |
| El-Wakil et al., [ | No significant difference | Increased tubule markers in urine of fasting group | Larger prospective studies recommended |
| Al Muhanna [ | eGFR reduction | Possibility of renal deterioration | Larger studies were recommended |
| NasrAllah & Osman [ | eGFR reduction | Increased risk of CKD deterioration with significant increase of serum creatinine in the fasting group | Deterioration was possibly due to CKD progression, no fasting |
| Bakhit et al. [ | Increase in creatinine by ≥ 26.5 μmol/L | Increase of serum creatine in 33% of patients (prospective) | Fasting affects CKD patients and further studies are required |
| Al Wakeel [ | No significant differences in clinical and laboratory parameters | CKD stages 3 and 4 patients | Fasting has no significant effect |
| Kara et al. [ | No significant eGFR difference | Increased risk of eGFR reduction in patients aged > 72 years | Age related CKD deterioration or dehydration risk |
| Hassan et al. [ | Increased urea levels, improved after Ramadan. The eGFR rate was not altered, BNP levels significantly reduced | CKD grades 2-4 patient, eGFR not effectively changed (prospective) | CKD grades 2-4 can fast with a reasonable degree of safety. |
| Bernieh et al. [ | eGFR significantly improvement during Ramadan & the month after | No significant change of CKD progression, reduced proteinuria & sodium urine excretion (prospective) | Good tolerance and safety of fasting, good diet control, regular follow up and encourage water drinking |
| Chowdhury et al. [ | Significant increase of proteinuria and the risk of acute renal failure | CKD stage 3 diabetic patients | Fasting has a risk of ARF and CKD progression, regular close monitoring |
| AlAbdan et al. [ | No change in renal function parameters during fasting, even in comorbid patients | Significant reduction of ARF risk in patients with comorbid diseases | Larger prospective studies were advised to investigate the beneficial effect of fasting in ARF reduction |
| Ekinci et al. [ | No significant deterioration of renal function | Proteinuria is significantly improved | In adult autosomal dominant polycystic disease patients with early CKD stage following Ramadan fasting |
| Baloglu et al. [ | Significant increase of serum urea | About 23% of the CKD stage 2-3 patients had ARF. A significant link between HTN, the number of fasting days, ARF. (prospective) | Patients CKD stage 2-3 and HTN must be evaluated more carefully, encouraging well hydration, and strictly followed for ARF |
| Eldeeb et al. [ | Improved eGFR and serum creatinine | In stage 3-4 CKD patients with HTN, central and blood pressure improved (prospective) | Fasting improves blood pressure control and renal function |
Published articles summary of kidney transplantation and Ramadan fasting
Estimated Glomerular Filtration Rate (eGFR)
| Authors/Year | Remarks | Conclusion |
| Bragazzi [ | Me-tanalysis review, no effect of fasting on eGFR | Able to fast |
| Ghalib et al. [ | 35 patients, eGFR and proteinuria were not different significantly | Able to fast |
| Abdalla et al. [ | 23 patients, stable renal function parameters | Able to fast Ramadan |
| Einollahi et al. [ | 19 patients, serum creatinine did not change significantly | Able to fast |
| Einollahi [ | 41 patients, no significant change of serum creatinine even in high creatinine baseline value patients | Able to fast |
| Argani et al. [ | 30 patients, serum electrolyte and creatinine levels remained stable | No significant effect of fasting |
| Said T et al. [ | 145 patients, no significant changes in serum creatinine | No effect of fasting, able to fast |
| Hejaili et al. [ | 43 patients, no significant change in eGFR and serum creatinine. No difference even in 2 years follow up | Able to fast |
| Qurashi et al. [ | 43 Patients, no significant difference between the fasted and the non-fasted, and the month of Ramadan fasting in two consecutive years during the hottest months | Able to fast |
| Ouziala [ | 14 patients, serum creatinine stable, but urea increased. | Able to fast, good hydration and regular follow up |
| Ibrahim et al. [ | 280 patients, no difference in eGFR | Able to fast |
| Bragazzi [ | Systematic review, Increase incidence of renal colic | Fasting was well tolerated |
Published articles summary of dialysis and Ramadan fasting
Hemodialysis (HD), Peritoneal Dialysis (PD)
| Authors/Year | Remarks | Conclusion |
| Al Wakeel [ | HD, Hypernatremia and hyperkalemia | None required hospitalization |
| Al Wakeel et al. [ | PD, no adverse effect from fasting | Able to fast Ramadan |
| Al-Khader et al. [ | HD, no significant effect on weight, BP or serum potassium | Able to fast |
| Imtiaz et al. [ | HD, no harms effect, death rate does not increase, increased Phosphorus and potassium | Close observation |
| Wan et al. [ | HD, No weight increase, serum albumin improved | Able to fast, close attention |
| Alshamsi et al. [ | HD, Significant increase in phosphorus, BP, albumin and weight no change | Able to fast, close follow-up |
| Adanan et al. [ | HD, improved intradialytic serum phosphorus, creatinine, weight, but albumin decreased | Participants young, need close monitoring |
| Imtiaz et al. [ | HD, Higher mortality | Possibly death due to comorbid, do not urge patient to fast. Further studies are needed |