...............It's a constant struggle - especially since most of the foods I love are now not recommended.
My cardiologist tells me to eat only whole wheat bread and avoid the white stuff.My renal dietitian tells me to eat only white bread and avoid while wheat.
So I am already too light.. But recently I have been loosing weight again.. I just haven't been very hungry at all so I just don't eat enough.. Any tips or advice?
I do not use butter substitutes. Many are barely a molecule short of being plastic. I don't think plastic belongs in our digestive system.
LOL Prednisone will add weight to you!Surprisingly it also helps with many afflictions, like pain. Every gout flare up the first thing they tell me to do is start taking large doses. As soon as symptoms begin to recede to start tapering off, taking at least a week before stopping.If you are not hungry, it WILL make you hungry. You will eat most anything you can fit in your mouth, not all good either.
Quote from: Simon Dog on May 02, 2016, 12:16:38 PMMy cardiologist tells me to eat only whole wheat bread and avoid the white stuff.My renal dietitian tells me to eat only white bread and avoid while wheat. Slice of white bread has 1.9 G protein, 25g potassium, 25 g phosphorus, 0.6g fiber. 1 slice of whole wheat bread 3.6 G protein, 65g potassium, 65 g phosphorus, 2g fiber. White bread is void of nutrients, raise you insulin levels and do you much harm.
My center asks me about my appetite every single time I go... so it's certainly been an issue with other patience there. I find I go through cycles of being SO HUNGRY and not wanting to eat at all. When it's the latter, I tend to relax my restrictions so I can find SOMETHING that I want to eat and up my binders accordingly. My clinic also gave me some protein gel to supplement.It's a constant struggle - especially since most of the foods I love are now not recommended.
The basic problem is that when you are a dialysis patient most of the old rules you lived by for most of your life have changed. The old 3 oz of meat per meal is a good example. Dialysis removes protein from your blood during treatment, patients who urinate generally pass protein in the urine.because of this Hemo Dialysis patients need more protein. The other things is the rules need to be tailored to your blood work. Perfect results allow room for some rule breaking. Less than perfect more rule following. Your best friend in doing this is the center dietician. They should help you figure your own set of rules. The penalty for getting labs way out of whack could be death. So minor changes and wait for your next labs would be prudent. The Rock and hard place is too much phospherous or potassium wifi kill you, while too little will kill you too. Like I say find the dietician make friends, work with the dietician good labs you get a little play in your diet bad results tighten up. This sounds easy but not reading content listings on food is a other problem, recently after three years of perfect labs all of a sudden my results were not good. It turned out I had tried Eggo waffles, they were good, and without reading the content of them I began eating them for breakfast and sometimes lunch. I began to retain fluid, and my lab results were just bad. After getting the results I read the box four the Eggo waffles has400 mg of salt. I began to retain fluid because of the huge increase of salt, the fact I was retaining fluid meant I was going less that raised my potassium and phosphorous levels. Dropped the waffles, next month perfect lab results. Work with the dietician, read packages, if needed keep a food diary. One last example my next door neighbor in dialysis got back bad phosphorous results, the tech mentioned that his Duncan Donut Koolatta may have chocolate and maybe he should not drink them. I used my iPad and looked up the ingredients in a Koolata it turned out it was loaded with a phosphorous compound as a preservative. After stopping the Koolattas his results returned to normal.