학술논문

Dietary potassium intake, kidney function, and survival in a nationally representative cohort.
Document Type
article
Source
American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. 116(4)
Subject
chronic kidney disease
dietary potassium
kidney function
mortality
plant-dominant
Animals
Antioxidants
Dietary Fiber
Kidney
Micronutrients
Nutrition Surveys
Phosphorus
Potassium
Potassium
Dietary
Renal Insufficiency
Language
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In healthy adults, higher dietary potassium intake is recommended given that potassium-rich foods are major sources of micronutrients, antioxidants, and fiber. Yet among patients with advanced kidney dysfunction, guidelines recommend dietary potassium restriction given concerns about hyperkalemia leading to malignant arrhythmias and mortality. OBJECTIVES: Given sparse data informing these recommendations, we examined associations of dietary potassium intake with mortality in a nationally representative cohort of adults from the NHANES. METHODS: We examined associations between daily dietary potassium intake scaled to energy intake (mg/1000 kcal), ascertained by 24-h dietary recall, and all-cause mortality among 37,893 continuous NHANES (1999-2014) participants stratified according to impaired and normal kidney function (estimated glomerular filtration rates