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Healthy diet may mean longer life for kidney patients

By Chukwuma Muanya, Assistant Editor
13 December 2016   |   4:06 am
A healthy diet may help people with kidney disease live longer, researchers report.
Study found eating lots of fruit, vegetables, fish, whole grains was linked to lower rate of early death. PHOTO: WIKIPEDIA

Study found eating lots of fruit, vegetables, fish, whole grains was linked to lower rate of early death. PHOTO: WIKIPEDIA

*Study found eating lots of fruit, vegetables, fish, whole grains was linked to lower rate of early death

A healthy diet may help people with kidney disease live longer, researchers report.

They analysed seven studies that included more than 15,000 people with chronic kidney disease, to assess the effects of a diet high in fruits, vegetables, fish, legumes, cereals, whole grains and fiber.

In six of the studies, a healthy diet was consistently associated with a 20 percent to 30 percent lower rate of early death, and with 46 fewer deaths per 1,000 people over five years. But the study did not directly prove that a healthy diet would lengthen life.

The international team of researchers found no significant association between a healthy diet and risk of kidney failure.

The findings were published December 8 in the Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology.

“Chronic kidney disease now affects about 10 percent to 13 percent of the adult population and substantially increases risks of cardiovascular complications and early death,” said study leader Dr. Giovanni Strippoli, from the University of Bari in Italy.

“In the absence of randomised trials and large individual cohort studies, this study is the best available evidence to drive clinical decision-making by patients and doctors on whole dietary approaches in chronic kidney disease,” Strippoli said in a journal news release.

Chronic kidney disease patients are told to restrict their intake of certain nutrients such as phosphorus, potassium, protein and sodium. But evidence suggests these restrictions — which can be difficult to follow — may do little to reduce patients’ risk of premature death, the researchers said.

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