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Question
I have been told I have a high
reading of protein in my urine. My doctor prescribed
lisinopril. I don't like the side effects. Is there
anything natural I can take to decrease the protein
level?
-- Anonymous
Answer
Proteinuria - protein in the urine
(determined by urinalysis) - often indicates some type
of kidney disease. The first thing you have to
determine is what is causing the problem. Normally,
the kidneys filter waste products out of the blood so
they can be eliminated from the body. Most proteins
are too big to pass through the kidneys’ filtering
system unless the filters have been damaged in some
way.
Among the possibilities: some
variety of nephritis, a group of diseases, usually
autoimmune, that cause inflammatory damage to the
kidneys. Diabetes can also result in kidney damage, as
can high blood pressure. In fact, elevated blood
pressure often accompanies kidney disease and
accelerates it.
If you have proteinuria and high
blood pressure, you do need drug treatment to bring it
down. The drug you were prescribed, lisinopril, is an
ACE (angiotensin-converting enzyme) inhibitor, a type
of blood pressure medication that works better than
other drugs to reduce the pressure in blood vessels
in the kidneys and increase the flow of urine, which
helps lower blood pressure. I know of no natural
alternative to drug treatment for this problem.
Jonathan Dranov, MD, a nephrologist in State College,
PA, tells me that 15 to 20 percent of patients taking
ACE inhibitors develop a cough as a side effect.
Unfortunately, if this happens to you as a result of
taking this medication, you’ll likely have the same
cough with other ACE inhibitors. In that case, an
option would be to try angiotensin receptor blockers (ARB),
another type of medication. These two types of drugs
appear to work to protect kidney function better than
other medications used to treat high blood pressure.
It is very important to work with
your doctor to find a treatment that you can tolerate
that is effective for the kidney problem causing
proteinuria. Otherwise, it is likely that your kidney
function will deteriorate, and you’ll be in very big
trouble, eventually requiring dialysis.
By
Andrew Weil, M.D.
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