0000000000460587

AUTHOR

Siren Sezer

showing 2 related works from this author

Retarding Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD) Progression: A Practical Nutritional Approach for Non-Dialysis CKD

2016

This is a case report on a patient with non-dialysis chronic kidney disease (CKD) in whom several nutritional issues are briefly discussed from a practical point of view. The article is accompanied by an editorial published in this Journal in relation to the 2nd International Conference of the European Renal Nutrition working group at ERA-EDTA—“Retarding CKD progression: readily available through comprehensive nutritional management?”— and focuses on several practical topics associated with the nutritional approach for the conservative treatment of non-dialysis CKD. The article is divided into 3 sections—basic nutritional assessment, nutritional targets, and nutritional follow-up in non-di…

Chronic kidney disease; Conservative treatment; Ketoanalogs; Low protein diet; Nutrition; Point of care; Progression; Protein-energy wastingmedicine.medical_specialtyProtein-energy wastingmedicine.medical_treatment030232 urology & nephrology030204 cardiovascular system & hematologylcsh:RC870-923urologic and male genital diseases03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineLow-protein dietChronic kidney diseaseKetoanalogsMedicineIntensive care medicineDialysisPoint of careNutritionProgressionbusiness.industryProtein energy wastinglcsh:Diseases of the genitourinary system. Urologymedicine.diseasePoint of careConservative treatmentLow protein dietbusinessConservative treatmentKidney disease
researchProduct

CKD NUTRITION, INFLAMMATION AND OXIDATIVE STRESS

2014

Introduction and Aims: Serum p-cresyl sulfate associates with cardiovascular disease in patients at different stages of chronic kidney disease. p-Cresyl sulfate concentrations are determined by intestinal uptake of p-cresol, human metabolism to p-cresyl sulfate and renal clearance. Whether intestinal uptake of p-cresol itself is associated with cardiovascular disease in patients with renal disease has not been studied to date. Methods: We performed a prospective study in patients with chronic kidney disease stage 1-5 (clinicaltrials.gov NCT00441623). Intestinal uptake of p-cresol, under steady state conditions, was estimated from 24h urinary excretion of p-cresyl sulfate. Primary endpoint w…

Transplantationmedicine.medical_specialtyFramingham Risk ScoreCardiovascular Historybusiness.industryHazard ratioRenal functionmedicine.diseaseGastroenterologyEndocrinologyNephrologyDiabetes mellitusInternal medicinemedicineMyocardial infarctionProspective cohort studybusinessKidney diseaseNephrology Dialysis Transplantation
researchProduct