If your phosphorus reading is out of range, you need binders when you eat something containing phosph, (protein foods). Since you're vegetarian, you might not need them as much.
From what you've posted before, it sounds like you have a very renal friendly diet and a little bit of function left. Some people are just lucky like that and don't need binders. It would show up in your labs if you needed them. In my case, my PTH was so high that it was causing my phosphorus to also skyrocket, so I was on a super dosage of binder (plus TUMS... which also can work as a binder in a pinch... who knew!). We've finally gotten the PTH under control, and the phosphorus is finally in range, and the binder does has come down.Issue here was I had run out of the low dose stuff and took some of the higher dose stuff to cover the gap. It would have been fine if I had glugged it down with a Coke, but just a few bites of food wasn't enough to stop it from wrecking havoc.
To be honest, I am "only" a vegetarian, not a vegan... With "easy digestible vegetarian food" the Professor meant to cook vegetarian food which is easily digested by a body with fragile-kidney-function and resulting health-issues.
QuoteTo be honest, I am "only" a vegetarian, not a vegan... With "easy digestible vegetarian food" the Professor meant to cook vegetarian food which is easily digested by a body with fragile-kidney-function and resulting health-issues.How are you getting enough protein on this diet? I realize that lentils, cheese and eggs are protein foods. On the other hand, being on PD where the protein is washed out every single night by the PD, I have to eat enormous amounts of animal protein and I still don't make good albumin numbers. That's with eating 2 eggs and some cottage cheese for breakfast; a turkey (or similar) sandwich for lunch and about 1/2 pound of some protein for dinner. Then I even have to eat a protein bar. And I'm still at only 3.7 albumin. I would be much more vegetarian if I thought I could get away with it. Needless to say, I do take binders.
I never thought a difference between vegan and vegetarian. Different words describing the same thing. NOT?
Quote from: kickingandscreaming on October 16, 2016, 09:40:08 AMQuoteTo be honest, I am "only" a vegetarian, not a vegan... With "easy digestible vegetarian food" the Professor meant to cook vegetarian food which is easily digested by a body with fragile-kidney-function and resulting health-issues.How are you getting enough protein on this diet? I realize that lentils, cheese and eggs are protein foods. On the other hand, being on PD where the protein is washed out every single night by the PD, I have to eat enormous amounts of animal protein and I still don't make good albumin numbers. That's with eating 2 eggs and some cottage cheese for breakfast; a turkey (or similar) sandwich for lunch and about 1/2 pound of some protein for dinner. Then I even have to eat a protein bar. And I'm still at only 3.7 albumin. I would be much more vegetarian if I thought I could get away with it. Needless to say, I do take binders.My blood-tests have not shown a lack of protein and doctors who have regularly studied my blood-tests have never mentioned that I should change anything in my diet, in fact they always say that my vegetarian diet seems to have eased my life in kidney failure, because, perhaps due to my vegetarian diet, dialysis does not seem to pester me with overly too many side-symptoms and/or dialysis-side-issues. Perhaps my body has found a way to deal with my vegetarian diet since having started with it in 1971/72 (after my kidneys first failed and recovered a little to avoid dialysis until 2014) and perhaps my vegetarian diet may have also assisted my transmission from pre-dialysis to dialysis in December 2014 ? Perhaps I should add here that I have always kept myself very slim and as fit as I possibly can be in ESRF through all those years... Recently there have been some interesting researches into kidney-failure and a vegetarian diet, mainly in Italy, Germany and Holland and it seems that, with the help of the medical Professor who advised me all these years ago, I may have been lucky to have been "on the right track" .Best wishes from Kristina.
Quote from: kristina on October 16, 2016, 11:16:24 AMQuote from: kickingandscreaming on October 16, 2016, 09:40:08 AMQuoteTo be honest, I am "only" a vegetarian, not a vegan... With "easy digestible vegetarian food" the Professor meant to cook vegetarian food which is easily digested by a body with fragile-kidney-function and resulting health-issues.How are you getting enough protein on this diet? I realize that lentils, cheese and eggs are protein foods. On the other hand, being on PD where the protein is washed out every single night by the PD, I have to eat enormous amounts of animal protein and I still don't make good albumin numbers. That's with eating 2 eggs and some cottage cheese for breakfast; a turkey (or similar) sandwich for lunch and about 1/2 pound of some protein for dinner. Then I even have to eat a protein bar. And I'm still at only 3.7 albumin. I would be much more vegetarian if I thought I could get away with it. Needless to say, I do take binders.My blood-tests have not shown a lack of protein and doctors who have regularly studied my blood-tests have never mentioned that I should change anything in my diet, in fact they always say that my vegetarian diet seems to have eased my life in kidney failure, because, perhaps due to my vegetarian diet, dialysis does not seem to pester me with overly too many side-symptoms and/or dialysis-side-issues. Perhaps my body has found a way to deal with my vegetarian diet since having started with it in 1971/72 (after my kidneys first failed and recovered a little to avoid dialysis until 2014) and perhaps my vegetarian diet may have also assisted my transmission from pre-dialysis to dialysis in December 2014 ? Perhaps I should add here that I have always kept myself very slim and as fit as I possibly can be in ESRF through all those years... Recently there have been some interesting researches into kidney-failure and a vegetarian diet, mainly in Italy, Germany and Holland and it seems that, with the help of the medical Professor who advised me all these years ago, I may have been lucky to have been "on the right track" .Best wishes from Kristina. Kristina, your experience in warding off dialysis for as long as you have has always been a very remarkable story and I am glad to be reminded of it again through reading your post. It has however just occurred to me though that you sound very unfamiliar with a lot of lab results that are part of the routine lab results for any kidney patient, in spite of being a very educated and knowledgeable person in general. I wonder therefore whether you've had constant testing for your kidney disease over the years & whether you still do?