In type 2 diabetes patients with macroalbuminuria (excessive urine levels of a protein called albumin), replacing red meat with chicken in the diet reduces macroalbuminuria, as well as microalbuminuria. Albumin is normally found in the blood, but indicates impaired kidney function when it appears in the urine.
Previous studies have reported that replacing red meat with chicken reduced the urinary albumin excretion rate by 46 percent and also improved the serum cholesterol levels in a group of type 2 diabetic patients with microalbuminuria.
Researchers from the Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil, had 17 type 2 diabetic patients with macroalbuminuria follow their usual diet; a chicken diet (red meat replaced with chicken); or a low-protein vegetarian diet that included milk and milk products. Each participant followed each diet, in a random order, for four weeks, taking a four-week break in between the diets.
It was found that the urinary albumin excretion rate was significantly lower after the chicken diet and the low-protein diet compared with the usual diet. Three subjects (18 percent) after the chicken diet and eight (47 percent) after the low-protein diet had macroalbuminuria reduced to microalbuminuria. The diet-induced reduction in urinary albumin in patients who already had advanced diabetic kidney disease was one of the most important findings.
The chicken and low-protein diets also improved cholesterol and increased blood levels of polyunsaturated fatty acid, one of the good fats. This shows that eliminating red meat from the diet may lower the increased risk of death from cardiovascular disease that often occurs in the these patients. Levels of blood sugar and blood pressure were largely unaffected by the diets. While the patients' weight was not altered by the usual diet or the chicken diet, it was lower after the low-protein diet.
American Journal of Clinical Nutrition ,
June 2006
June 2006
