Title of article
Synbiotic Supplementations for Azotemia in Patients With Chronic Kidney Disease A Randomized Controlled Trial
Author/Authors
Dehghani, Hamideh Department of Nursing - Shahid Sadoughi University of Medical Sciences and Health Services, Yazd, Iran , Heidari, Fatemeh Department of Nursing - Shahid Sadoughi University of Medical Sciences and Health Services, Yazd, Iran , Mozaffari-Khosravi, Hassan Cellular and Molecular Gerash Research Center - Gerash University of Medical Sciences, Gerash, Iran , Nouri-Majelan, Nader Department of Nephrology - Shahid Sadoughi University of Medical Sciences and Health Services, Yazd, Iran , Dehghani, Ali Department of Epidemiology - Shahid Sadoughi University of Medical Sciences and Health Services, Yazd, Iran
Pages
7
From page
351
To page
357
Abstract
Introduction. Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is a progressive and
irreversible impairment of kidney function; if it progresses to
the end-stage of CKD, dialysis or kidney transplant is needed. In
general, there are no definitive treatment to slow the progression
of CKD. This study aimed to determine the effect of synbiotic
supplementations on azotemia in patients with CKD.
Materials and Methods. A randomized controlled trial was conducted
on 66 patients with CKD (stages 3 and 4). The participants were
randomly divided into 2 groups to receive synbiotic supplement,
1000 mg/d, and placebo (2 capsules a day) for 6 weeks. At the
beginning and end of the study, blood parameters and kidney
function were evaluated.
Results. Of the 66 patients studied, 16 patients (24.2%) were
women and 50 (75.8%) were men. The mean age and body mass
index of the participants were 61 ± 7.65 years and 28.52 ± 4.06
kg/m2, respectively. The level of blood urea nitrogen showed a
significant reduction following the intake of synbiotic supplement
(from 40.80 ± 22.11 mg/dL to 36.14 ± 20.52 mg/dL, P = .01). Serum
creatinine, uric acid, and other indicators of kidney function showed
no significant change.
Conclusions. The intake of synbiotic supplement could reduce blood
urea nitrogen in patients with CKD in stages 3 and 4; however, it
had no effect on the other markers of kidney function.
Keywords
kidney function , chronic kidney disease , azotemia , synbiotic supplements
Journal title
Iranian Journal of Kidney Diseases (IJKD)
Serial Year
2016
Record number
2517870
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