Trying to locate lists of high potassium an... - Kidney Disease

Kidney Disease

12,452 members5,135 posts

Trying to locate lists of high potassium and phosphorous foods and....

Javismama profile image
4 Replies

Hi! My son just turned 3 and he is living with kidney disease. Where can I find material for creating a healthy meal plan along with a DO NOT eat list for low potassium and low phosphorous foods?

Written by
Javismama profile image
Javismama
To view profiles and participate in discussions please or .
4 Replies

Hi,

Go to davita.com and along their menu bar you will see a drop-down section for recipes. Each recipe will give you seasonal meals and separate ones for breakfast, lunch, and dinner, snacks, drinks, etc. Each recipe will also give you a breakdown as to how much potassium and phosphorus is in each one. All of us require those items for a healthy living. What we have to do is to be careful not to overdo it.

If your doctor or renal dietitian said something more specific about eliminating one or both of them I'd get a second opinion. However, if you still need a list of foods high in both, I've listed the ones I received from my renal dietitian.

Potassium - Milk, milkshakes, hot chocolate, ice cream, sherbet, frozen yogurt, pudding, yogurt, custard, dried fruit, nectarines, oranges, kiwi, orange and prune juice, honeydew, bananas, apricots, nuts, seeds, whole grain, bran cereal, sports drinks, artichoke, avocado, fresh beets, Brussel sprouts, dried beans and peas, greens and spinach, okra, potatoes (unless you leach them first), pumpkin, winter squash, tomatoes and tomato products.

Phosphorus - cheese, milk and soymilk, milkshakes, pudding, yogurt, custard, ice cream, ice milk, sherbet, frozen yogurt, whole grain, bread, cereals baking soda, baking powder, pancakes, waffles, muffins, cake, cornbread, avocado, biscuits, beans, peas, corn tortilla, brown rice, wild rice, rice mixes, coconut nuts, nut butter, seeds, dried fruit, dark-colored sodas, chocolate, pizza, organ meats.

As you can see some items are both lists, but also some items in limited amounts are required for us to have. Check with your doctor or dietitian for specific amounts.

Best of luck.

jobeth profile image
jobeth in reply to

I read somewhere recently that phosphorus from meat sources is absorbed around 80%, but that phosphorus from plant sources is only absorbed about 40%. What surprised me was that phosphorus used in processing food or added phosphates to food is absorbed 100%. If you are going to eat food with phosphorus it would be better to eat plant sources. I believe this came from Lee Hull. He is writing a book about kidney disease.

T-ip profile image
T-ip in reply to

Corn tortillas , not flour

T-ip profile image
T-ip

My insurance has a Nurse that keeps in touch & sends great rerecipes and a list of all of the good and bad that you can eat check with your insurance company

Not what you're looking for?

You may also like...

how to keep protein potassium and phosphorus low and get 2,000 cal/day?

recently diagnosed 3a Ckd. Went to a renal dietician- no help- eat plant based diet and keep...
70Beach profile image

Trying to give docs the benefit of the doubt….

I’m seeing the trend! Like me, so many of us with CKD 3 weren’t told of their CKD, the diagnosis...
MyStarr profile image

IgA kidneys and Having high cholesterol not related to my diet.

Hi. I m Jessica 31 years old. I got diagnosed IGA kidneys 6 years ago . I ve seen Kidneys...

WEIGHT LOSS DRUGS AND CKD

I am 86. Gefr low 30s to low 40s for 2 years since diagnosed. I have a good Nephrologist and...
Honeylover profile image

Low or very low protein diets. If you've no uremia, will you obtain any benefit?

I had uremia at CKD3a/b (uremia =higher levels of urea than there ought to be present in your...
Skeptix profile image

Moderation team

See all
PattyM_NKF profile image
PattyM_NKFModerator
DorisL_NKF profile image
DorisL_NKFModerator

Top community tags

Content on HealthUnlocked does not replace the relationship between you and doctors or other healthcare professionals nor the advice you receive from them.

Never delay seeking advice or dialling emergency services because of something that you have read on HealthUnlocked.