The orders from my nurse were actually to only take binders with breakfast and dinner, not lunch or snacks, but that made no sense to me at all.
BTW, for those of us taking calcium carbonate (Tums, etc.) as a phosphorus binder, note how little phosphorus it really binds. To bind all the phosphorus in just one three-ounce serving of cooked chicken would require at least FIVE Tums tablets.
Here's a list of some commonly prescribed phosphorus binders and how much phosphorus each one binds. It comes from the National Kidney Foundation's Kidney Disease Outcomes Quality Initiative (KDOQI):http://tinyurl.com/5us6jfUnfortunately, Renvela (sevelamer carbonate) is not included among them, though Renagel (sevelamer hydrochloride) is. I would imagine their phosphorus-binding power is similar though. In animal testing, 1 gm Renagel bound to 80 mg phosphorus. No data on human testing is available yet though.BTW, for those of us taking calcium carbonate (Tums, etc.) as a phosphorus binder, note how little phosphorus it really binds. To bind all the phosphorus in just one three-ounce serving of cooked chicken would require at least FIVE Tums tablets.