I guess I'll see if the dietician can pinpoint anything in particular.
Make sure you're not using any salt substitutes- some ate potassium chloride
If a food comes in a can or a box, it most likely is loaded with potassium and we should limit how much we eat of it. Notice I said LIMIT as we cannot avoid everything, merely limit how much.Fast food must be limited as well.Careful selections and reasonable limits can lower our potassium well enough for most of us.It takes a lot pf practice and attention to reading labels.
Quote from: JW77 on March 01, 2018, 05:47:40 AMI guess I'll see if the dietician can pinpoint anything in particular.Do not rely on your dietitian. I have been told some stupid and widely inaccurate things by hospital dietitians. Best method is to type into Google the search"How much potassium in XXXX" (without the quotes), where XXXX is whatever you want to know the potassium content of.I have never been over on potassium or phosphate levels in the monthly bloods, yet I overeat, eat out sometimes, have takeaways sometimes, eat processed food for lunch (bacon sandwiches on dialysis days, ready meals on most non dialysis days) eat some bad things (just finished a takeaway fried chicken meal), and sometimes have coffee. This is because I juggle my intake. I make sure that my daily intake of potassium, phosphate, and calcium is sensible by cutting back heavily on the next meal if I went over on one. However to do this you need to look up the comparative phosphate/potassium/calcium content of food, just listing "good" and "bad" is no good, because there is a big range in each of those - something that only just made it into the good range will have very nearly as much bad stuff as something in the bad range.It sounds complicated, but it is as easy as managing a calorie controlled diet, and millions of people do that every day. It keeps you healthy, and it keeps you happy - try it.
Until my heart attack and two angioplasties I never had a problem with phosphorus or potassium either because I urinated what ever I drank. The dye from the angioplasties reduced my output enough I began to have problems with mostly phosphorus. The problem with ESRD is that there is as almost as many varients as patients. But if you have Residual Kidney Function (you still produce urine) good lab work is much easier than it is for patients with minimal to no urine output.
Some BP meds have potassium in. Not just started maybe Losartan or an other med ending in an?Love, Cas
Is your dialysate changed? My K+ kept rising, turned out the bath was changed from 1K to 2K.Also you could increase your sodium bicarb (with permission from a dr maybe)