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Renal Diet Plan & Cookbook -  Nicole Moore

Renal Diet Plan & Cookbook (eBook)

The Optimal Nutrition Guide to Manage Kidney Disease

(Autor)

eBook Download: EPUB
2018 | 1. Auflage
385 Seiten
Publishdrive (Verlag)
978-0-00-011911-7 (ISBN)
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There is no doubt that patients are tired of having physicians telling them what can and cannot eat. Nicole Moore has put together for the first time a kidney health gourmet diet and guide cookbook with detailed and well-laid out diet plans and recipes which will help patients, not just because they are kidney- and heart-healthy, but because they are mouth-watering.


The issues bothering around dialysis, transplants, and treatments of co-morbidities, living with chronic kidney disease can so devastating. For your diet, it is no mere substitutions to come about genuine change- and most individual need help achieving this.


 Nicole Moore has created kidney-friendly recipes that are delicious and nutritious. You choose what you like for her weekly changing menus. You can cook great meals in 30 minutes or less!


In this book, Renal Diet Plan & Cookbook: The Optimal Nutrition Guide to Manage Kidney Disease, all the ingredients are already pre-measured for you.


This dash Diet renal health book offers you an empowering, results-oriented renal diet cookbook with diet plans and recipes that help your kidneys function more optimally, providing you with ways to keep away from insidious options such as transplants or dialysis. This kidney healthy cookbook delivers easy, the effective nutritional solution to get you right on the track.


The recipes make your food more fun to cook, elegant to serve and amazing to taste. All the kidney-friendly recipes are surprisingly simple as there are no exotic seasonings or special gadgets involved, just careful selection of ingredients and the classic methods of haute cuisine. Only the results are exotic.


    Easy-Does-It meal plans for low-sodium, low-protein, or low-fat customization


    More than 125 delicious recipes to meet your nutritional needs based on which stage you are.


    Helpful and valuable nutritional facts for tracking calories, protein, sugar, fat, sodium, potassium, and phosphorus


The Renal Diet Plan & Cookbook is your essential, all-in-one renal diet cookbook giving you everything you need to take your kidney health into your own hands.

1.  Knowing Your Kidney Disease

Kidney disease is becoming more pronounced in the United States, and thus we need to educate ourselves as much about it as we can. The more we learn about it by ourselves, the better we can do to take care of this critical bodily system. If you have been diagnosed with chronic kidney disease (CKD), education can give you the power to most successfully and effectively manage the disease. Once you have a complete knowledge of what chronic kidney disease is, you can start to take control of your budding health needs. Adopting healthy changes early in the stages of kidney disease will help to know how well you will take charge of your kidney health.

I am here to hold you by hand and guide you every step of the way. Just as it is common with every new process, it may appear overwhelming at the beginning. This chapter provides the basis for getting enlightened and will help you understand kidney disease as you start you embark on the road to a heartier kidney.

What Does the Kidneys Do For You?

Our kidneys are small in size, but they perform wonderful jobs to maintain our bodily balance. Kidneys are bean-shaped, almost the size of a fist, and are situated in the middle of the back, on the left and right sides of the spine, just below the rib cage. When everything is functioning accurately, the kidneys perform several functions such as:

- Filter waste substances from the blood

- Get rid of excess fluid or water from the body

- Secretes hormones to help manage blood pressure

- Induce bone marrow to produce red blood cells.

- Produce an active form of vitamin D that enhances strong and healthy bones.

Our kidneys are similar to a weighing balance, working to maintain accurate amounts of nutrients and minerals in the body at a particular point of time and in exact measure. When the kidneys begin malfunctioning, waste materials and toxins will start to build up in the body. AS kidneys start failing, they lose their capacity to filter out waste products, leading to kidney disease. The inability of the kidneys to carry out their tasks, place the burden on your shoulders; It becomes your responsibility to make changes to your diet so as to minimize the workload placed on the kidneys,  particularly in the early stages of kidney disease.

What Causes Kidney Disease?

There are various causes of kidney disease, ranging from physical injury or disorders that can harm the kidneys but the 2 top causes of kidney disease are:

1. Diabetes

2. High blood pressure

These fundamental conditions also place individuals at risk of developing cardiovascular disease. Early treatment may not only cut down the progression of the disease but also lower your risk of developing heart disease or stroke.

Kidney disease can affect anybody, at any age, Hispanics, American Indians, and African Americans are at high risk for kidney failure, as these groups have a higher prevalence of high blood pressure and diabetes. Uncontrolled diabetes is the foremost cause of kidney disease. Diabetes can destroy kidneys and make them fail. Diabetes is a disease in which the body does not produce sufficient insulin or cannot utilize normal quantities of insulin efficiently, thereby causing the blood sugar levels to become high.

We digest protein, our bodies produce waste products. In the kidneys, millions of minute blood vessels known as capillaries act as filters.

As blood moves through the capillaries, the waste materials are filtered through urine. Substances like red blood cells and proteins are too large to pass through the capillaries and thus stay in the blood. Diabetes can destroy this process, and high levels of blood sugar can make the kidneys to filter excess blood. All these excess jobs overburden the kidneys. Over a period of time, the kidneys can begin to seep out and the proteins which our bodies require for optimal performance is lost in the urine. The presence of little amounts of protein in your urine is referred to as microalbuminuria. When kidney disease is diagnosed in the early stages, there are several treatments that may hinder the aggravation of the disease. If the kidney disease is discovered at the later stages, large amounts of proteins in your urine, known as macroalbuminuria, can cause end-stage renal disease.

The second leading source of kidney disease is high blood pressure, also called hypertension. One in three Americans is at the risk for Kidney disease as a result of high blood pressure. Though there is no cure for high blood pressure, some pills, a low-sodium diet, and physical activity can reduce blood pressure.

The kidneys help to control blood pressure, but when blood pressure gets high, the heart is made to work under stressed condition pumping blood. High blood pressure can destroy the blood vessels in the kidneys, lessening their capacity to work optimally. When the force of blood flow is high, blood vessels begin to enlarge so that the blood can flow more freely. The enlarging and scarring usually weakens the blood vessels all over the whole body, kidneys inclusive. And when the blood vessels of the kidneys are damaged, they may not eliminate the waste and excess fluid from the body, causing an unsafe cycle, as the excess fluid in the blood vessels can increase blood pressure even more.

Cardiovascular disease is the foremost cause of death in the United States. The heart performs an outstanding job pumping oxygen and nutrient-rich blood through our arteries to important organs-including the brain and its tissues. When kidney disease happens, that process can be interfered with, and the risk of developing heart disease becomes so high.

Cardiovascular is a general term for all conditions that may harm the heart and the blood vessels, including heart attack, coronary artery disease, atherosclerosis, high blood pressure, and heart failure.

Complications from kidney disease may develop and can cause heart disease.

With diabetes, too much blood sugar remains in the bloodstream. The high blood sugar can destroy the blood vessels in the kidneys and other parts of the body. And since high blood pressure is a resultant effect from diabetes, the excess pressure can weaken the walls of the blood vessels, which can eventually result in a stroke or heart attack.

Other conditions like drug abuse and some autoimmune diseases can equally bring harm to the kidneys. As a matter of fact, every medication we swallow into our body has gone through the kidney for filtration. If the medication is not used according to health care provider's instructions, or it is an illicit substance such as cocaine, heroin or the likes, it can cause damage to the kidneys by increasing the blood pressure, also raising the risk of a heart failure, stroke, and even death.

An autoimmune disease is a type in which the immune system, organized to shield the body from disease, sees the body as an intruder and attacks its own systems, including kidneys. Certain types of lupus, for instance, fight the kidneys. Another immune disease that can cause kidney failure is known as Good pasture syndrome, an array of conditions that affect the kidneys and the lungs. The destruction of the kidneys from autoimmune illnesses can bring about chronic kidney disease (CKD) and kidney failure.

MANAGEMENT AND TREATMENT PLANS FOR CHRONIC KIDNEY DISEASE (CKD)

The best approach to manage Chronic Kidney Disease is to be actively involved in your treatment program, irrespective of your stage of renal disease. Accurate treatment entails a collaboration of working with a healthcare team, strictly following the renal diet, and making healthy choices-particularly how and what you consume.

-Cooperating with your healthcare team: When you have renal disease, collaborating with your health care team can be exceptionally essential in your team program as well as being personally responsible.

Constantly getting in touch with your physician or health care team can provide you with resources and information that help you to make informed choices concerning your treatment needs and offer you with a broad chance to share information, vent, receive sound advice, and get support in correctly managing this disease.

Following strictly to a renal diet: The spirit of this book is the renal diet. Adhering to this diet can make a significant difference in your health and vigor. As it is common with any change, following the diet may be difficult at the initial stage. Vital changes to your diet, especially in the early days, can certainly prevent the need for dialysis. These changes include consuming a low-protein diet, lowering fat consumption, limiting salt, and getting sufficient calories if you need to shed weight. Be true to yourself in the first place by learning what you need and see as your personal goals and impediments. Begin by making little changes. It is alright to slip at times, all of us do, therefore there is no need hating yourself for that. With management and support, these minute changes will form the basis of habits for your exciting new lifestyle. In a process of time, you will start taking control of your diet and health.

-Making healthy lifestyle choices: Lifestyle decisions play a critical part in our health when it comes to helping control the renal disease. Lifestyle choices such as dedicating time for physical activity, managing weight, getting adequate sleep, limiting stress, and reducing smoking and alcohol use will assist you to take charge of your complete health, making it simple to manage your kidney disease. Follow this simple formula will do you a lot of benefits: Keep toxins out of...

Erscheint lt. Verlag 18.10.2018
Sprache englisch
Themenwelt Sachbuch/Ratgeber Essen / Trinken
ISBN-10 0-00-011911-3 / 0000119113
ISBN-13 978-0-00-011911-7 / 9780000119117
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