Are you obese? You might have chronic kidney disease
Keep obesity at bay, to keep your
kidney healthy. Obesity, according to city doctors, is one of the biggest
drivers of chronic kidney disease, a condition where the kidney functions
deteriorate progressively.
Doctors estimate that around 15%
people in our country live with chronic kidney disease.
“In India, 15% of the population
is either obese -- with BMI more than 27-- or they have central obesity,
meaning fat around their belly, which leads to metabolic syndromes. This, in
turn, leads to kidney disease. It is a cycle of epidemic, one drives the
other,” said Dr Sandeep Mahajan, professor of nephrology at All India Institute
of Medical Sciences (AIIMS).
In fact, obesity increases the
risk of chronic kidney disease by 83%, according to Dr Suman Nayak, additional
professor of nephrology at Institute of Liver and Biliary Sciences (ILBS).
“Obesity is one of the risk
factors of diabetes, which is the leading cause of kidney disease. Apart from
that, obese people have high metabiolic demands that leads to increased
filtration and causing kidney disease,” said Dr Nayak.
“Also, we see more and more
children are obese, who develop diabetes and hypertension early on in life.
This means they are also at a risk of developing CKD earlier in life,” she
said.
Doctors estimate that around 15%
people in our country live with chronic kidney disease. (Shutterstock)
The silent killer
Doctors call chronic kidney
disease a ‘silent killer’ because patients usually show no symptoms. It is only
detected if they get tested.
People in high-risk groups should
regularly test their kidney functions.
“People who are obese, have
diabetes and hypertension, have family history of kidney disease, have had kidney
stone or recurring urinary tract infection or above 50 years of age should get
tested for kidney disease,” said Dr Sandeep Gulati, director of nephrology at
Fortis Institute of Renal Sciences and Transplant (FIRST).
Another thing that doctors
caution against is depending on kidney function test for checking kidney
functions. “People usually come to us and say that their KFT is normal. But it
is not accurate at all. The creatinine levels will go up only after 50% of the
kidney function is lost,” said Dr Gulati. An eGFR test instead can tell even
when 5% of the kidney function is lost.
Have a healthy diet, include less
sugar and more whole grains, fruits and nuts, to reverse the damage.
(Shutterstock)
What can be done?
Making lifestyle changes in the
early stages of the disease can help in slowing the progression or in a small
percentage of people reversing the damage.
“Have a healthy diet – include
less sugar and more whole grains, fruits and nuts. Exercise – 30 minutes of
brisk walking, cycling or swimming can help. Quit smoking and maintain good
control of diabetes and blood pressure,” said Dr Mahajan.
However, for 1 – 1.5% of the
people, who have end-stage kidney disease, dialysis and kidney transplantation
are the only options.
Every year 2 lakh people get
listed for a kidney transplant but only 7,500 get an organ. The rest have to survive
on dialysis, a process that removes waste from the body by replicating kidney
function.
However, the cost is a limiting
factor for dialysis.
Patients in the last stage of the
kidney disease need maintenance dialysis, two to three dialysis sessions in a
week. With a single session costing around R 2,000, it is out of reach for most
people
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