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Gut Microbiota Interventions to Retain Residual Kidney Function

Toxins 2023 23 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Denise Mafra, Julie Ann Kemp, Natália Alvarenga Borges, Michelle Wong, Natália Alvarenga Borges, Peter Stenvinkel Peter Stenvinkel Denise Mafra, Peter Stenvinkel

Summary

This review examines strategies to modify gut bacteria in patients with chronic kidney disease in order to slow further kidney damage. Researchers found that gut imbalances in these patients lead to increased production of harmful substances that can worsen kidney function. The study suggests that dietary interventions, probiotics, and other approaches to restore healthy gut microbiota may help preserve remaining kidney function and improve patient outcomes.

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Residual kidney function for patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) is associated with better quality of life and outcome; thus, strategies should be implemented to preserve kidney function. Among the multiple causes that promote kidney damage, gut dysbiosis due to increased uremic toxin production and endotoxemia need attention. Several strategies have been proposed to modulate the gut microbiota in these patients, and diet has gained increasing attention in recent years since it is the primary driver of gut dysbiosis. In addition, medications and faecal transplantation may be valid strategies. Modifying gut microbiota composition may mitigate chronic kidney damage and preserve residual kidney function. Although various studies have shown the influential role of diet in modulating gut microbiota composition, the effects of this modulation on residual kidney function remain limited. This review discusses the role of gut microbiota metabolism on residual kidney function and vice versa and how we could preserve the residual kidney function by modulating the gut microbiota balance.

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