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Chronic Kidney Disease and the Carnivore Diet [Video/Podcast]


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I have Stage 4 Chronic Kidney Disease and have been eating a Carnivore Diet for over a year now. Am I killing my kidneys with all that protein, or am I healing them? Modern medicine teaches that protein is hard on the kidneys, especially for those with CKD, so am I taking a big risk here? Can a person with CKD eat a Carnivore Diet or meat-heavy carnivore-centric keto diet? Should those with healthy kidneys eat low protein and avoid red meat in order to protect their kidney function? I discuss all these questions in this video.

 

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00:00 Introduction
00:32 The Protein Myth
02:06 What does the research reveal?
04:12 Protein is Vital
05:06 I have Stage 4 CKD
07:12 Why the Carnivore Diet?
09:56 My Results and Bloodwork
11:56 Why Creatinine goes UP
14:21 Cystatin C and other Markers
15:58 What actually caused my CKD?

DISCLAIMER: The Carnivore Talk website and its audio and video content is for general informational purposes only. The use of the information found within our content or from materials linked to from our content is at the user’s own risk. The content published by Carnivore Talk is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Users should seek the assistance of their health care professionals to obtain medical advice and to diagnose or treat any condition.

#carnivore #carnivorediet #ketodiet #chronickidneydisease #ckd #kidneydisease #kidneyhealth


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  • 3 months later...

I hope so too. 

I just got some blood work done and my creatinine was checked - and it again looks worse on paper (explained in the video). I'm going to go get a cystatin C next week and hopefully that has remained the same.

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  • 2 weeks later...
On 10/21/2024 at 11:02 AM, Bob said:

I hope so too. 

I just got some blood work done and my creatinine was checked - and it again looks worse on paper (explained in the video). I'm going to go get a cystatin C next week and hopefully that has remained the same.

how is your cystatin C now?

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On 10/30/2024 at 10:14 AM, w1zxjr said:

how is your cystatin C now?

My Cystatin C has gone up slightly from the last time, which unfortunately trends in the wrong direction than what I wanted to see. 

There's a huge disparity though with my creatine vs cystatin C. Part of this disparity is the protein in the diet, as explained in my video. The other part I think is my fault. When I had the high triglyceride scare, I started taking high dose Niacin and fenofibrate. Fenofibrate is known to increase creatinine levels. But, after several months I started to have major issues with cramps. This issue almost miraculously disappeared overnight when I ran out of Niacin, which I posted about HERE back in the beginning of August.

While my initial research said that Niacin is good for lowering trigs and LDL while raising HDL, and being good for the kidneys, now my much deeper research revealed that high dose Niacin in people with late stage renal disease (me) can cause rhabdomyolysis (muscle wasting) and increase the chance of early all-cause mortality (like, holy crap!).

I think I was giving myself rhabdomyolysis, as evidenced by the chronic cramping. This muscle wasting and protein breakdown in turn caused my creatinine to go through the roof. On paper, I'm already dead. But I still feel fantastic and symptom free - especially now that I dropped the Niacin. I only struggle with electrolye balance which a little magnesium helps me with.

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Guest w1zxjr
1 hour ago, Bob said:

My Cystatin C has gone up slightly from the last time, which unfortunately trends in the wrong direction than what I wanted to see. 

There's a huge disparity though with my creatine vs cystatin C. Part of this disparity is the protein in the diet, as explained in my video. The other part I think is my fault. When I had the high triglyceride scare, I started taking high dose Niacin and fenofibrate. Fenofibrate is known to increase creatinine levels. But, after several months I started to have major issues with cramps. This issue almost miraculously disappeared overnight when I ran out of Niacin, which I posted about HERE back in the beginning of August.

While my initial research said that Niacin is good for lowering trigs and LDL while raising HDL, and being good for the kidneys, now my much deeper research revealed that high dose Niacin in people with late stage renal disease (me) can cause rhabdomyolysis (muscle wasting) and increase the chance of early all-cause mortality (like, holy crap!).

I think I was giving myself rhabdomyolysis, as evidenced by the chronic cramping. This muscle wasting and protein breakdown in turn caused my creatinine to go through the roof. On paper, I'm already dead. But I still feel fantastic and symptom free - especially now that I dropped the Niacin. I only struggle with electrolye balance which a little magnesium helps me with.

Rhabdomyolysis is just the worst and fastest way to damage your kidney. However, Cystatin C could also be affected by thyroid functions tho but I hope this is just temporary and I hope you will do well. Stay strong 💪.

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Thank you w1zxjr 🙂 

I've reversed everything except for my CKD and hypertriglyceridemia, which is a consequence of the CKD. I've never checked my thyroid. I should just for the sake of it. 

I'm making a handful of changes and hope to see some improvement, even if it's just a return to the Cystatin C level I had previously. 

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