动物蛋白摄入量与慢性肾脏病患者可能的心血管风险:机制与证据

0 UROLOGY & NEPHROLOGY
Jaimon T. Kelly , Ailema Gonzalez-Ortiz , David E. St-Jules , Juan Jesus Carrero
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引用次数: 0

摘要

慢性肾脏病(CKD)患者罹患心血管疾病(CVD)的风险增加,而肾功能是决定这一风险的关键因素。慢性肾脏病也是心血管疾病患者出现并发症和疾病进展的主要原因。实践指南建议,可以通过健康的生活方式和饮食行为来控制 CKD 患者的心血管疾病风险。评估饮食对心脏和肾脏健康的影响非常复杂,因为饮食中的多种生物活性化合物可能通过多种途径和机制促进或预防心血管疾病或慢性肾脏病。本综述旨在讨论富含蛋白质的食物与慢性肾脏病患者心血管疾病风险之间的关联机制和证据。本综述强调了目前以证据为基础的 CKD 一级预防策略,其中包括健康饮食模式,而三级预防策略则侧重于避免摄入过量蛋白质和减少膳食酸负荷。限制蛋白质对改善心血管疾病和慢性肾脏病预后的效果并不一致;但是,这些方法对肾脏健康没有负面影响。低蛋白和极低蛋白膳食是减少慢性肾脏病和心血管疾病恶化的有效干预措施。动物来源的蛋白质可能比植物来源的蛋白质更不利于肾脏健康,因为动物来源的蛋白质具有特定的酸负荷、氨基酸组成、尿毒症毒素的产生、伴随的饱和脂肪含量、低纤维组成以及更高的高级糖化终产物的产生。没有放之四海而皆准的营养处方。需要针对与肾功能减退相关的心血管疾病的独特风险因素进行个性化营养干预,以改善慢性肾功能衰竭患者的健康状况。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Animal Protein Intake and Possible Cardiovascular Risk in People With Chronic Kidney Disease: Mechanisms and Evidence
Individuals with chronic kidney disease (CKD) have an increased risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD), and the kidney function is a critical determinant of this risk. CKD is also a major cause of complications and disease progression in patients with CVD. Practice guidelines suggest that CVD risk in CKD patients can be managed through healthy lifestyle and dietary behaviors. Assessing the impact of diet on heart and kidney health is complex because numerous bioactive compounds from diet may contribute to or prevent CVD or CKD via a myriad of pathways and mechanisms. The objective of this review was to provide a discussion of the mechanisms and evidence linking protein-rich foods and CVD risk in people with CKD. This review highlights the current evidence-based strategies for primary CKD prevention that incorporate a healthy dietary pattern, while tertiary prevention strategies focus on avoiding excess protein and reducing dietary acid load. The effect of protein restriction for improving CVD and CKD outcomes is conflicting; however, these approaches show no negative effects on kidney health. Low-protein and very low-protein diets are promising interventions for reducing the progression of CKD and CVD. Animal-sourced protein may be more detrimental to kidney health than plant-sourced protein due to specific acid load, amino acid composition, generation of uremic toxins, accompanying saturated fat content, low fiber composition, and higher generation of advanced glycation end-products. There are no one-size fits all nutrition prescriptions. Personalized nutrition interventions that target the unique risk factors for CVD associated with reduced kidney function are required to improve the health of people living with CKD.
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CiteScore
5.30
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