Nutrition Management for Chronic Kidney Disease: Differences and Special Needs for Children and Adults.

IF 2.8 3区 医学 Q2 UROLOGY & NEPHROLOGY Seminars in nephrology Pub Date : 2023-07-01 Epub Date: 2023-11-18 DOI:10.1016/j.semnephrol.2023.151441
Robert H Mak, Arpana Iyengar, Angela Yee-Moon Wang
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Abstract

Common goals of nutritional therapy across the spectrum of pediatric and adult chronic kidney disease (CKD) include maintaining normal body mass and composition and reducing associated morbidity and mortality. Adult nephrologists caring for children and adolescents may be challenged by the existing complexities in identifying and interpreting the nutritional status and growth in children. Pediatric nephrologists may face situations that call for a sound knowledge of assessing nutritional status and providing nutrition therapy for adolescents and young adults. One important additional nutrition goal in children is to achieve normal growth and development. Children are growing and therefore need more calories and nutrients than just maintaining their body weight and composition. Lack of weight and height gain actually is considered failure to thrive in children. Some fundamental differences in approaches to nutritional therapy in CKD are necessitated based on the etiology of CKD. A large proportion of adults with CKD are diabetics, so the approach would be a low-carbohydrate diet. Children with CKD, especially young ones, often are anorexic, so calorie supplements that could include quite a lot of carbohydrates often are prescribed. More adults with CKD have hypertension and atherosclerotic comorbidities, which result in recommendations for low-salt and low-fat diets. Children with CKD often have salt and electrolyte wasting disease states and would require normal- or even high-salt diets, and fats often are included in supplements to bolster calorie intake. Low-protein diets often are recommended in adults with predialysis CKD to slow disease progression. Children are growing and have a higher protein daily requirement. Low-protein diets have not been found to be efficacious in children with CKD, in achieving normal growth, or in slowing disease progression. Adult nephrologists caring for children and adolescents may be challenged by the existing complexities in identifying and interpreting nutritional status and growth in children. Pediatric nephrologists may face situations that call for a sound knowledge of assessing nutritional status and providing nutrition therapy for adolescents and young adults. This article discusses the differences in the assessment of nutritional status between children and adults, as well as provides a comprehensive approach to nutritional management for CKD across the age spectrum. Semin Nephrol 43:x-xx © 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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慢性肾脏疾病的营养管理:儿童和成人的差异和特殊需要。
儿童和成人慢性肾脏疾病(CKD)营养治疗的共同目标包括维持正常的体重和组成,降低相关的发病率和死亡率。照顾儿童和青少年的成人肾病学家可能会受到识别和解释儿童营养状况和生长发育的复杂性的挑战。儿科肾病学家可能面临的情况,需要一个健全的知识评估营养状况和提供营养治疗的青少年和年轻人。儿童的另一个重要营养目标是实现正常的生长发育。孩子们正在成长,因此需要更多的卡路里和营养,而不仅仅是维持他们的体重和身体成分。体重和身高增加不足实际上被认为是儿童成长的失败。根据CKD的病因,需要在CKD的营养治疗方法上有一些根本的区别。成人慢性肾病患者中有很大一部分是糖尿病患者,因此治疗方法是低碳水化合物饮食。患有慢性肾病的儿童,尤其是年幼的儿童,通常患有厌食症,因此医生通常会开出含有大量碳水化合物的卡路里补充剂。越来越多的成人慢性肾病患者有高血压和动脉粥样硬化合并症,因此建议采用低盐和低脂饮食。患有慢性肾病的儿童通常有盐和电解质消耗疾病状态,需要正常甚至高盐饮食,并且脂肪通常包含在补充剂中以增加卡路里摄入量。透析前CKD患者通常推荐低蛋白饮食以减缓疾病进展。孩子们正在成长,每天对蛋白质的需求量更高。目前还没有发现低蛋白饮食对CKD患儿、实现正常生长或减缓疾病进展有效。照顾儿童和青少年的成人肾病学家可能会受到识别和解释儿童营养状况和生长的复杂性的挑战。儿科肾病学家可能面临的情况,需要一个健全的知识评估营养状况和提供营养治疗的青少年和年轻人。本文讨论了儿童和成人之间营养状况评估的差异,并提供了跨年龄范围CKD营养管理的综合方法。Semin Nephrol 43:x-xx©2023 Elsevier Inc.。版权所有。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Seminars in nephrology
Seminars in nephrology 医学-泌尿学与肾脏学
CiteScore
5.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
27
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Seminars in Nephrology is a timely source for the publication of new concepts and research findings relevant to the clinical practice of nephrology. Each issue is an organized compendium of practical information that serves as a lasting reference for nephrologists, internists and physicians in training.
期刊最新文献
Patient-Reported Outcome and Experience Measures to Advance Patient-Centered Research, Practice, and Policy in Nephrology. Patient-Reported Experience Measures to Evaluate and Improve the Quality of Care in Nephrology. Evaluating Medical Devices in Nephrology Using Patient-Reported Outcome and Experience Measures. Navigating Choices in Nephrology: The Role of Patient-Reported Outcomes and Preferences in Economic Evaluations and Decisions in Health Care. Measuring Social Functioning in Chronic Kidney Disease.
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