Enhancing Kidney and Heart Health Through Dietary Acid Reduction With Fruits and Vegetables


 Enhancing Kidney and Heart Health Through Dietary Acid Reduction With Fruits and Vegetables

Doctors recommend incorporating fruits and vegetables as a core component in treating patients with hypertension. Diets rich in these foods have been shown to lower blood pressure, reduce cardiovascular risk, and enhance kidney health due to their alkaline-producing effects. A new five-year interventional randomized control trial, published in The American Journal of Medicine by Elsevier, supports these findings(1 Trusted Source
Kidney and Cardiovascular Protection Using Dietary Acid Reduction in Primary Hypertension: A Five-Year, Interventional, Randomized, Control Trial

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Despite continuous efforts to enhance hypertension treatment through pharmacological means, the prevalence of hypertension-related chronic kidney disease and associated cardiovascular mortality continues to rise. Heart disease remains the leading cause of death for patients with chronic kidney disease.

The Impact of the Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension (DASH) Diet on Hypertension and Kidney Health

The Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension (DASH) diet that is rich in fruits and vegetables reduces blood pressure and is the recommended first-line treatment for primary hypertension. Nevertheless, this diet is under-prescribed, and when prescribed is under-implemented despite supportive epidemiological data.

The DASH diet and others generally high in fruits and vegetables are associated with lower blood pressure, lower risk for and progression of chronic kidney disease, lower cardiovascular disease risk indicators, and lower cardiovascular disease mortality.

Lead investigator of the study Donald E. Wesson, MD, MBA, Department of Internal Medicine, Dell Medical School – The University of Texas at Austin, says, “As a nephrologist (kidney doctor), my acid-base laboratory studies ways by which the kidney removes acid from the blood and puts it into the urine. Our animal studies showed years ago that mechanisms used by kidneys to remove acid from the blood can cause kidney injury if the animals were chronically (long term) exposed to an acid-producing diet. Our patient studies showed similar findings: that is, an acid-producing diet (one high in animal products) was kidney-harmful, and one that is base-producing (one high in fruits and vegetables) is kidney-healthy. Other investigators showed that a diet high in fruits and vegetables is heart-healthy. We hypothesized that one way that fruits and vegetables are both kidney- and heart-healthy is that they reduce the amount of acid in the diet and therefore the amount of acid that kidneys have to remove from the body.”

To test this hypothesis, a study was designed in which participants with hypertension, but not diabetes, and very high levels of urine albumin excretion (macroalbuminuria) were selected.

Patients with macroalbuminuria have chronic kidney disease, a high risk for the worsening of their kidney disease with time, and a high risk to subsequently develop cardiovascular diseases. In a randomized control trial over a five-year period, investigators divided the cohort of 153 patients with hypertension into three groups:


Study participants added 2-4 cups of base-producing fruits and vegetables in addition to their usual daily food intake. Study participants prescribed NaHCO3 (acid-reducing sodium bicarbonate, which is common baking soda) tablets in two daily doses of 4-5 650 mg tablets. Study participants receiving standard medical care from primary care clinicians.

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The results of the study show that both fruits and vegetables and NaHCO3 improved kidney health, but only fruits and vegetables, and not NaHCO3, reduced blood pressure and improved indices of cardiovascular disease risk.

Co-investigator Maninder Kahlon, PhD, Department of Population Health, Dell Medical School – The University of Texas at Austin, explains, “Importantly, fruits and vegetables achieved the latter two benefits with lower doses of medication used to lower blood pressure and reduce cardiovascular disease risk.”

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Prioritizing Dietary Interventions in Hypertension Treatment

This means that one can get the kidney health benefits with either fruits and vegetables or NaHCO3, but we get the blood pressure reduction and reduced cardiovascular disease risk with fruits and vegetables, but not with NaHCO3.

This supports our recommendation that fruits and vegetables should be ‘foundational’ treatment for patients with hypertension, because we accomplish all three goals (kidney health, lower blood pressure, and reduced cardiovascular disease risk) with fruits and vegetables, and we can do so with lower medication doses.

The research team emphasizes “foundational” because many clinicians begin hypertension treatment with drugs and then add diet strategies if blood pressure is not properly controlled. The findings from its studies support the opposite: treatment should begin with fruits and vegetables and then add drugs as needed.

Dr. Wesson concludes, “Dietary interventions for chronic disease management are often not recommended and even less often executed because of the many challenges to get patients to implement them. Nevertheless, they are effective, and in this instance, kidney and cardiovascular protective. We must increase our efforts to incorporate them into patient management and more broadly, make healthy diets more accessible to populations at increased risk for kidney and cardiovascular disease.”

The researchers also advise patients with hypertension to ask their clinician to measure a urine albumin-to-creatinine ratio (UACR) to determine if they have underlying kidney disease and an increased risk for subsequent cardiovascular disease.

Reference:

  1. Kidney and Cardiovascular Protection Using Dietary Acid Reduction in Primary Hypertension: A Five-Year, Interventional, Randomized, Control Trial – (https://www.amjmed.com/article/S0002-9343(24)00357-7/fulltext)

Source-Eurekalert





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