Wait, where did the nutritionist get the 1200 mg number? Did she look up the info on the drink itself? Your daily limits for phos should be set individually by your neph, depending on how your labs are - what the "normal" daily allowance is shouldn't make any difference, so the % part doesn't really matter. If the label on the drink tells you a % of phos instead of an actual mg. number, it should also tell you what daily allowance they are basing it on. Read the label yourself. The programs the nutritionists use may not have the brand name of protein drink you are buying, so her numbers may all be estimates. Mine just did an estimate of calories, phos, potassium on a 3 day list of my foods, and she asked me for brand names on everything, but had to estimate on a lot of things since her computer program didn't have everything I buy.
Quote from: glitter on January 13, 2007, 12:21:25 AMif you look at the phosphorus it says 35%-how do you figure out what that is?can this be taken during dialysis with a binder?Zach's answerThe % of phosphorus on most food labels usually refers to the Daily Allowance (DA), which for phosphorus (PO4) is 1,000 mg. So if the listed PO4 is 35%, then the amount is 350 mg. That's about 3 PhosLo gel caps, depending on your own situation. You can drink it during dialysis (with your binders), but remember to add it to your fluid-loss rate.