

Volume 89, Issue 4, April (2003), pp. 491-498 © The Author 2003
doi:10.1079/BJN2002808
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Effects of dietary protein on renal function and lipid metabolism in five-sixths nephrectomized rats
Shu-Tzu Chen1, Sheng-Jeng Peng2 and Jiun-Rong Chen1,* 1Department of Nutrition and Health Sciences, Taipei Medical University,
Taipei 110, Taiwan
2Division of Nephrology, Cathay General Hospital, Taipei 110, Taiwan
(Received 28 May 2002Revised 28 October 2002Accepted 8 November 2002)
The objective of the present experiment was to examine the effect of substituting different quantities of soyabean protein for casein on renal function and lipid metabolism in rats with chronic renal failure induced by a five-sixths nephrectomy. Experimental animals were subjected to a nephrectomy and fed either casein or soyabean protein (200 or 100 g/kg diet). The diets were isoenergetic with identical fat, Na, K and P contents. Rats ingesting 200 g casein/kg diet showed a significantly (P<0·05) accelerated course of chronic renal failure, while the soyabean-protein groups showed retarded progression of the experimentally induced renal disease and hypercholesterolaemic effects. Rats in the low-soyabean-protein diet (100 g/kg) also demonstrated increased serum albumin and decreased serum triacylglycerol, total cholesterol concentrations and blood urea-N; however, the low-casein diet significantly (P<0·05) increased serum triacylglycerol. Results of the present study show that the replacement of casein by soyabean protein was related to the rate of progression of renal failure and improvement in lipid profiles in serum of five-sixths nephrectomized rats.
Abbreviations: CRF; chronic renal failure
Corresponding Author: Dr Jiun-Rong Chen, fax +886 2 2737 3112, email syunei@tmu.edu.tw
Keywords: soyabean protein: Nephrectomy: Chronic renal failure: Progression: Plasma lipid
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