From what I understand (and I could be wrong), just the ability to urinate doesn't remotely guarantee that you are clearing solutes (inc. phosphorus). I've been told that residual renal function (RRF aka peeing) is mainly useful for regulating fluids. I still pee about 1800ml/day (that's on the high end of normal range) and that doesn't remotely clear the toxins or regulate electrolytes-- enough.
From what I understand (and I could be wrong), just the ability to urinate doesn't remotely guarantee that you are clearing solutes (inc. phosphorus).
I was under the impression that the 1 Jan 2016 Medicare change placed a requirement on the treating clinic to provide all renal related medications.
Apparently, it has a more natural type of ingredient, chitosan or something.
If you are taking Renvela you can go to their website and get a coupon and pay $5.00 for each refill for a year.
Patients filling prescriptions that are covered by or submitted for reimbursement under Medicaid, Medicare, VA, DOD, TRICARE, or similar federal or state programs including any state medical pharmaceutical assistance program are not eligible for this offer.
Without the testing, you wouldn't know (until too late) that your bones are disintegrating and that your arteries and blood vessels are calcifying. Cheese and chocolate are definitely 2 things to stay away from unless you can eat just one small square (1") of 85% cacoa dark, high phenolic chocolate/day for medicinal purposes. Not is you're a chocoholic. Then it is best to go cold turkey.
If I start taking binders early, will they allow me to eat a fairly normal diet - which for me includes lowered salt cheese, dark chocolate, nuts & some yogurt.
Athena, I think there is a very good chance that you can get your phos back into the normal range if you cut out cheese altogether. I remember I would always decide whether or not a particular food was "phosphorus worthy" (reminiscent of a Friends episode when Phoebe had to decide whether or not a potential boyfriend was "sponge worthy"), and I always decided that no, no food was phos worthy. Not in the least. I personally couldn't be bothered with worrying about whether just this one little bit of this one little phos-food would be a problem, so I didn't have a problem foregoing cheese, nuts and chocolate altogether. Anyway, give it a try before you begin binders; I think you have the right idea.
QuoteIf I start taking binders early, will they allow me to eat a fairly normal diet - which for me includes lowered salt cheese, dark chocolate, nuts & some yogurt. If you have unlimited funds, you could probably "cover" most of your deviations from the recommended renal diet. Except for Tums (which can have serious consequences when too many are used) most of the decent non-calcium binders are verrrrrrrry expensive, and they don't bind much phosphorous. If I recall, each Renvela pill binds up only 77mg of phosph. That's not much. A small piece of cheese (1oz) contains the following mg. of phosph.: Brie=52.6; Cheddar=143; cottage=44.5; feta=94.4; cream cheese= 30;mozzarela=130. etc.It adds up. I do eat the occasional feta (goat or sheep milk) and I remove the abundant salt by soaking it for several days in water. I actually prefer it that way as I can actually taste the cheese, and not just the salt.Nuts are another issue. There is some question about how much of their phosph is bioaccessible due to the presence of pjytates. That being said, i'm very careful with them. I used to eat a lot of nuts. Now I eat about 10 macadamias/day, spread out. They're the lowest in phosph.You should bookmark sites like http://nutritiondata.self.com and https://ndb.nal.usda.gov/ndb/search where you can learn about what different foods contain.