10% of the population worldwide is impacted by some form of kidney damage.
indirectly, by inducing or worsening diabetes and hypertension, themselves well-recognized risk factors of kidney disease. On the other hand, obesity could also cause kidney damage directly, by placing an unduly high burden on the kidneys over many years. A larger body needs more kidney function and obesity can cause harmful metabolic changes such as inflammation and oxidation.
It is estimated that 13.8% of chronic kidney disease in men and 24.9% in women in industrialized countries may be associated with overweight or obesity. Besides its now well-recognized association with chronic kidney disease, obesity has also been recognized to be a risk factor for kidney stones, and for various types of cancers like kidney cancer and others.
It is now clear that successful weight loss can result in improved control of diabetes and of high blood pressure, and it can lower the risk for developing chronic kidney disease.
“The best means to fight chronic kidney disease is prevention: it is thus paramount to identify and to treat all of its possible risk factors, such as obesity. Obesity is preventable and treatable, but reversing the tide will require concerted efforts not just from healthcare providers, but from the entire society", explains Dr. Csaba Kovesdy, Professor of Nephrology at University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, TN, US and Chief of Nephrology at the Memphis Veterans Affairs Medical Center.
A healthy lifestyle can make a very positive difference. The Minister of Health and Seniors, the Hon. Jeanne Atherden, CA, CPA, JP, MP said, “I really want to encourage everyone to choose healthy eating combined with more activity. This will help us control our weight, which will help prevent lifestyle related conditions like diabetes, hypertension and some cancers, as well as safeguard our kidneys.”