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Healthy Diet rocks when it comes to fighting
Kidney Stones
Newswise, September 2010 — Certain key
ingredients of a diet designed to prevent
high blood pressure can ward off kidney
stones, according to a study appearing in an
upcoming issue of theClinical Journal of the
American Society Nephrology (CJASN). The
results suggest how low-fat dairy products
and/or plants may have potent kidney
stone–fighting properties.
The Dietary
Approaches to Stop Hypertension (DASH)
diet—which is high in fruits, vegetables,
nuts and legumes, dairy products, and whole
grains and is low in sweetened beverages and
red and processed meats—effectively lowers
blood pressure.
Research by
Eric Taylor, MD (Brigham and Women’s
Hospital, Harvard Medical School, and Maine
Medical Center) and his colleagues also now
suggests that a DASH-style diet reduces
one’s risk of developing kidney stones.
The
investigators studied 24-hour urine samples
of 3426 individuals with and without a
history of kidney stones in the Health
Professionals Follow-up Study (HPFS) and the
Nurses’ Health Studies (NHS) I and II.
The study
participants were part of a previous, larger
study where Dr. Taylor reported that a
DASH-style diet was associated with a
reduced risk of kidney stone formation. HPFS
and NHS I and II are large studies of the
lifestyle practices and health of both male
and female health care workers.
Individuals
who followed a DASH-style diet excreted more
urine than individuals who did not follow
the diet, despite similar fluid intake. The
researchers speculate that higher urinary
volumes were, at least partly, a result of
the higher food water content in a
DASH-style diet.
Also, the
urine of DASH consumers contained a higher
concentration of citrate, an important
inhibitor of calcium stones, than the urine
of others in the analysis. The study also
indicated that there may be other important,
and perhaps as of yet unidentified, kidney
stone inhibitors in dairy products and/or
plants.
Dr. Taylor’s
data suggest that a DASH-style diet could be
important for keeping stones from
reappearing in people who suffer from them.
“We believe our results provide a strong
rationale for a randomized trial examining
the effect of a DASH-style diet on kidney
stone recurrence,” the authors wrote.
Study
co-authors include Meir Stampfer, MD, DrPH,
Gary Curhan, MD, ScD (Brigham and Women’s
Hospital, Harvard Medical School, and
Harvard School of Public Health); and David
Mount, MD (Brigham and Women’s Hospital,
Harvard Medical School, and VA Boston
Healthcare System).
Disclosures:
The authors reported no financial
disclosures.