(Aligned with Association of American Feed Control Officials and regulatory principles of U.S. Food and Drug Administration)
- Objectives of Nutritional Therapy in CKD
- Reduce accumulation of uremic toxins (urea, creatinine)
- Minimize glomerular hyperfiltration and proteinuria
- Control serum phosphorus and prevent secondary hyperparathyroidism
- Maintain optimal body condition score (prevent cachexia)
- Correct electrolyte and acid–base imbalance
- Improve palatability and voluntary feed intake
- Enhance overall quality of life and survival time
- AAFCO-Based Nutrient Modifications for CKD
Protein
- Target: 14–18% DM (moderate restriction)
- Prefer high biological value proteins:
- Egg white (ideal; low phosphorus)
- Lean chicken (controlled inclusion)
- Dairy proteins (limited due to phosphorus)
- Avoid:
- Low-quality plant proteins (increase nitrogenous waste)
- Rationale:
- Reduces uremic toxin production while preserving lean mass
Phosphorus
- Target:
- Stage II: <0.4% DM
- Stage III–IV: <0.3% DM
- Strategies:
- Ingredient restriction
- Use of phosphate binders (e.g., calcium carbonate)
- Rationale:
- Prevents renal secondary hyperparathyroidism
- Slows CKD progression
Energy
- Maintain adequate caloric density (95–130 kcal/kg⁰·⁷⁵/day)
- Increase energy via:
- Dietary fat
- Easily digestible carbohydrates
- Rationale:
- Prevents protein catabolism and weight loss
Fat
- Target: 15–25% DM
- Sources:
- Vegetable oils (sunflower, rice bran oil)
- Fish oil (EPA + DHA)
- Rationale:
- Improves energy density and palatability
- Omega-3 fatty acids reduce renal inflammation
Sodium
- Moderate restriction:
- Avoid excess salt
- Rationale:
- Helps control systemic hypertension
- Avoid:
- Severe restriction → may activate RAAS
Potassium
- Supplement if hypokalemia present:
- Potassium gluconate or citrate
- Rationale:
- Maintains muscle and nerve function
Calcium
- Maintain Ca:P ratio ≈ 1.2–1.4:1
- Use calcium carbonate:
- Acts as both calcium source and phosphate binder
Water
- Ensure adequate hydration
- Wet/semi-moist diets preferred
- Encourage:
- Fresh water availability
- Broth supplementation
- Rationale:
- Compensates for polyuria and prevents dehydration
- Ingredient Selection for Homemade Diets (Indian Context)
Carbohydrate Sources (Low phosphorus, high digestibility)
- White rice (primary base ingredient)
- Semolina (suji)
- Boiled potato (limited use)
Avoid:
- Wheat bran, multigrain flours (high phosphorus)
Protein Sources (High quality, low phosphorus)
- Egg white (primary protein source)
- Boiled chicken (limited inclusion)
- Curd/paneer (restricted use due to phosphorus content)
Fat Sources
- Sunflower oil
- Rice bran oil
- Fish oil supplements
Vegetables (Low phosphorus, safe)
- Pumpkin
- Bottle gourd (lauki)
- Carrot
Functional Additives (Advanced)
- Prebiotics: FOS, MOS
- Probiotics: Lactobacillus, Bifidobacterium
- Postbiotics (emerging research area)
Rationale:
- Modulate gut microbiota
- Reduce uremic toxin production (gut–kidney axis)
- Sample Homemade Renal Diet (Example: 10 kg Dog)
Daily Ration (Approx. 400–450 kcal)
- Cooked white rice: 150 g
- Egg white: 2–3 eggs
- Boiled chicken: 20–30 g (optional)
- Vegetables (pumpkin/lauki): 50 g
- Oil: 10–15 ml
- Fish oil: ~300 mg EPA+DHA
- Calcium carbonate: 500–1000 mg
Feeding Method
- Divide into 2–3 meals/day
- Feed fresh, warm food
- Avoid salt, spices, and processed ingredients
- Stage-wise Dietary Management
Stage I
- Mild protein adjustment
- Monitor kidney parameters
- No aggressive restriction
Stage II
- Introduce renal diet
- Moderate protein restriction
- Begin phosphorus control
Stage III
- Strict phosphorus restriction
- Add phosphate binders
- Introduce omega-3 supplementation
- Monitor hydration closely
Stage IV
- Focus on:
- Palatability
- Energy density
- Prevent cachexia
- Assisted feeding if required
- Supplementation Strategy
- Multivitamin-mineral mix (AAFCO-compliant)
- Omega-3 fatty acids (EPA/DHA)
- Calcium carbonate (phosphate binder)
- Potassium supplements (if needed)
- B-complex vitamins (due to urinary losses)
- Regulatory and Nutritional Compliance
U.S. Food and Drug Administration Considerations
- Ingredients must be:
- Safe
- Non-toxic
- Free from contaminants
- Avoid:
- Mycotoxin-contaminated grains
- Spoiled food
Association of American Feed Control Officials Considerations
- Homemade diets must:
- Meet minimum nutrient requirements
- Be balanced using supplements
- Long-term feeding without balancing → risk of deficiencies
- Common Errors in Homemade CKD Diets
- Excessive protein restriction → muscle wasting
- Inadequate phosphorus control → faster disease progression
- Lack of supplementation → micronutrient deficiencies
- Over-reliance on rice → protein-energy malnutrition
- Ignoring hydration → worsening azotemia