Stage 3 Kidney Disease and Diet: What can I eat?
It seems there is very little you can eat that is healthy for the Kidneys. The web site Davida has plenty of food on it but contradicts what other sources say. Anyone know anything for breakfast, lunch and dinner that does not have any sugar or flour bodies the obvious boring or bland foods good for Kidneys and I’m allergic to sugar of any kind of sweetener and flour. Thank you.
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Hugs to you @gingerw! You have a lot on your plate. The food items you mentioned are some of the ones I stick to, as well, although I stay away from the dairy as much as I can (because of my IBS situation). When you eat turkey, are you buying and cooking your own, or do you have a deli turkey you use that is low in sodium? We buy slices of the in-house roasted turkey at our grocery store but I think it has too much sodium. 🙁
@ldrlw, it's difficult to determine phosphorus amounts since listing that on a label is not required by law and most companies do not measure it. Sad but true.
Ezekiel 4:9 also has a dry cereal. Golden Flax is the one I use. It contains sprouted wheat, golden flax seeds, sprouted barley, sprouted millet, sprouted lentils and sprouted soybeans, malted barley, sprouted spelt, filtered water, sea salt, and rosemary extract. The ingredients are organic. I like the crunch.
@dks When possible, I like to buy a whole turkey, and roast it myself. I use a salt free seasoning to liberally season it! When it is deboned, several packages are frozen for future meals. Other than that, I use ground turkey and kick up the taste with different spices. Yes, it can be a chore, and somewhat expensive getting a whole turkey, but when you break it down, and understand the control you have over your diet, it is worth it.
Ginger
Hi ! Thanks so much for telling me about Ezekiel 4 9 dry cereal. I had never heard of it before and definitely will try it. The bread is frozen so I am very curious as to how the cereal is packaged — perhaps frozen as individual servings in pouches ? Oh, well, will find out soon enough. Thanks again for the information .
From eirrol
Has your daughter been checked for kidney and bladder stones? Oxalates do contribute to them. Perhaps her primary doctor can refer her to a urologist or nephrologist for tests and a dietitian for some help?
She's been checked by just about every specialist there is, especially since she's a nurse. Nobody can figure her problem out, and now the advice is pain management. If oxalates are so toxic to kidneys, why aren't they investigated for other parts of the body. She's begun an oxalate cleanse, very gradually since it's highly dangerous to go cold turkey. I wish the medical community would weigh in on this.
It is not frozen. It is packaged like any other dry cereal, but in a smaller box. I get it in a small market that sells primarily organic foods. It is shelved with other dry cereals. I mix it with another dry cereal (flakes) that has a low sugar content. Ezekiel has no added sugar and comes in several flavors, I think.
From eirrol
Thank you . That is so good to know. I know now to look for it a bit “farther afield” than just the regular grocery stores. I am in an area that is “ challenged” as far as that goes, but maybe Amazon, can do it, since it does not have to be frozen. Wish me luck.
@kamama94 ~ do you know if it's in the works for companies to begin adding phosphorus levels in the nutritional information on their labels? I thought I'd read somewhere that it might be.