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RSS FeedsNutrients, Vol. 10, Pages 596: Kidney Response to the Spectrum of Diet-Induced Acid Stress (Nutrients)

 
 

21 may 2018 12:00:12

 
Nutrients, Vol. 10, Pages 596: Kidney Response to the Spectrum of Diet-Induced Acid Stress (Nutrients)
 


Chronic ingestion of the acid (H+)-producing diets that are typical of developed societies appears to pose a long-term threat to kidney health. Mechanisms employed by kidneys to excrete this high dietary H+ load appear to cause long-term kidney injury when deployed over many years. In addition, cumulative urine H+ excretion is less than the cumulative increment in dietary H+, consistent with H+ retention. This H+ retention associated with the described high dietary H+ worsens as the glomerular filtration rate (GFR) declines which further exacerbates kidney injury. Modest H+ retention does not measurably change plasma acid–base parameters but, nevertheless, causes kidney injury and might contribute to progressive nephropathy. Current clinical methods do not detect H+ retention in its early stages but the condition manifests as metabolic acidosis as it worsens, with progressive decline of the glomerular filtration rate. We discuss this spectrum of H+ injury, which we characterize as “H+ stress”, and the emerging evidence that high dietary H+ constitutes a threat to long-term kidney health.


 
73 viewsCategory: Nutrition
 
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