Friday, January 3, 2014

What Diet Should A Diabetic Undergoing Dialysis Follow

Part of the job of dialysis is to take off extra fluid your kidneys do not remove anymore. This is important, because if you have too much fluid, you may have:

Swelling in your face, hands, and feet called edema

Headaches and low energy

Trouble breathing from fluid in your lungs

Heart damage from stretching your heart with too much fluid

High blood pressure that can lead to a stroke

What Diet Should A Diabetic Undergoing Dialysis Follow?

On the Black Diet, you eat only black foods. Because you'll soon tire of blackened fish, burned veggies, squid ink, black soybeans, and licorice and there aren't a heck of a lot of other black foods, you'll eat a heck of a lot less.
Vegetables like lettuce, cucumber and eggplant are excellent vegetable choices for a dialysis diet. Potassium is essential for your heart to beat properly but too much can be lethal in kidney disease


Meat and Protein food. beef, chicken, turkey and fish freshly prepared using herbs and spices instead of salt. Include meat with every meal to obtain necessary amounts of protein. For breakfast have an egg, or one serving of egg substitute.

Thursday, January 2, 2014

Diabetes Kidney Disease and Dialysis: Tips In Daily Life


Dialysis patient can reduce the amount of wastes that need to be removed from his blood by making certain choices about what he chooses to eat and drink.
Signs of Kidney Disease in Patients with Diabetes
Albumin/protein in the urine
High blood pressure
Ankle and leg swelling, leg cramps
Going to the bathroom more often at night
High levels of BUN and creatinine in blood
Less need for insulin or antidiabetic medications
Morning sickness, nausea and vomiting
Weakness, paleness and anemia
Itching
Diabetics face a daily challenge when it comes to food. Blood sugar management is critical, and can be difficult even when all the "right" choices are made, leaving diabetics open to a wide range of complications, including kidney failure.
Where relevant, to tackle lifestyle risk factors, such as:
Stop smoking if you smoke.
Eat a healthy diet.
Keep your weight and waist in check.
Take regular physical activity.
Cut back if you drink a lot of alcohol.

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