Have you looked up what the actual dose is, and what common doses are? Half a tablet doesn't tell you anything.prescribed me half a tablet of perindopril a day. I'm a little worried that this drug lowers blood pressure because my blood pressure is 110/65.
I was on a low dose of enalapril already (going by the name a close cousin of your perindopril) because of BP, and we upped the dose a bit..
Not according to my diabetes nurse.Is protein in the urine always an indicator of poor kidney function?
I'm still on enalapril. My last urine test showed I had still higher amounts of protein in my urine than normal, but the diabetes nurse assured me that because the albumin/creatinin ratio was perfectly fine, it's likely that my kidneys are perfectly fine as well, so I'm not worried for now and happy to see if things have changed in a year.Do I understand correctly that you are not taking medication now and everything is fine with you?
I suppose you meant 2mg?
To be honest, everything you say sounds like no-one you saw felt there is anything serious going on at the moment, even if your lab test was slightly outside the normal parameters.No one asked me to come in a month and see how the disease was going, the doctor just prescribed perindopril, saying that it would have to be taken for life. Maybe you should go to another nephrologist?
In my country the cut off point lays at 16, but as you can see in the thread I linked, in other countries up to 30 is considered normal. And you're very close to that.the protein value in urine was 36.9
Thank you @Antje77 . I shall do my best, but please don't shoot the defective messenger!Oh, and tagging in @Grant_Vicat , he knows all about kidneys.
As @ANTJE says, 2mg is a very low dose. Also as she says, 39 is close to the standard parameters (in the UK <30 is the target). Non diabetic children can often show signs of proteinurea and it is not usually a cause for concern. It is also heartening that @ANTJE has come down 19mg/l, which would have thrilled me in my earlier years. It is always disturbing to hear of complications beginning, but I would suggest that this is an isolated test and that once you have a good picture of say a year's readings, then would be the time to evaluate how you stand. This is easy for me to say, since I remember how I felt when a diabetologist gave me very unwelcome news when I was a student. As I regularly mention, the best help is controlling blood sugars to the best of your ability. I wouldn't be in a hurry to abandon your nephrologist - it looks like he is being cautious and very much keeping your wellbeing in mind. Try not to stress about this - it will only put your blood sugar (and blood pressure!) up. Here's to a favourable test next time!I recently discovered that I have proteinuria, I had urine test strips and they showed a value somewhere between the norm and the first green square, which was designated as 0.1 g/l. Scared, I did a protein analysis in daily urine, the protein value in urine was 36.9, which is higher than normal, and the daily concentration was 45mg/day which is absolutely normal. I turned to a nephrologist and he said that this was the first stage of nephropathy and prescribed me half a tablet of perindopril a day. I'm a little worried that this drug lowers blood pressure because my blood pressure is 110/65. Also, when I asked the nephrologist if I needed to change my very protein-rich diet, he replied that there was no need, kidney ultrasound was also absolutely normal.
I don't know at all how to react to this news. On the one hand, I understand that "a little nephroprotectors will not hurt you" does not mean "your kidneys will soon fail", but on the other hand, I feel sad. Of course, almost 20 years of diabetes cannot pass without a trace.
I probably want moral support more than help in understanding what is happening, because I trust a professional doctor. Just tell me if you had something like that and how it ended
and also like he isn't too worried about your results.
Also, proteinuria can be a temporary thing, caused by all kinds of stuff.
Try not to stress about this - it will only put your blood sugar (and blood pressure!) up.
It's also a very. very slowly developing complication, especially if you have reasonable blood glucose, like you have.Probably I am so worried because I know that nephropathy is a common complication
It's also a very. very slowly developing complication,
Just to put things in perspective, my blood sugars were very erratic from 1959-1979. After all there were no meters then, merely urine testing tablets which had a limited range of colours, looking like this in the link:Look at Grant_Vicat, he lived with serious CKD for 40 years and decades of very high BG,
For what it's worth, I had to have a medical assessment when I started sailing professionally when I was 21, 25 years ago, and 18 years before being diagnosed with diabetes.In fact, the fact that you have elevated protein scares me even more,
If you think that 20 years ago I had a cgm or at least a cool blood glucose meter, you are very wrongJust to put things in perspective, my blood sugars were very erratic from 1959-1979. After all there were no meters then, merely urine testing tablets which had a limited range of colours, looking like this in the link:
So at it's worst it was a rusty brown, which could mean anything between 13 - 44 in today's measurements. With meters being properly available in 1979, it made life better for guaging control, but the damage had already been established before that! I can assure you that I am extremely grateful, even to primeval treatment, to be able to type this now!Test for urine sugar using Clinitest Reagent Tablets
Series of photographs depicting a test for urine sugar using Clinitest Reagent Tablets manufactured by the Ames Company. Included in the photographs are directions for conducting the test and the color chart used to analyze the result.digital.sciencehistory.org
I remember doing that! But as the technology progressed they made sure this was not possible. Was that produced in the UK?If you think that 20 years ago I had a cgm or at least a cool blood glucose meter, you are very wrong. We had something like this
View attachment 60776
moreover, these strips had to be cut into three thinner parts, because they were very expensive
I have no ideaWas that produced in the UK?
I just noticed it is all in English. I wondered whether it was made by Ames, like the old clinitest and ketostix were? Obviously it must have been imported.I have no idea
I just noticed it is all in English. I wondered whether it was made by Ames, like the old clinitest and ketostix were? Obviously it must have been imported.
Probably Boehringer Mannheim and could be USA. Not that it matters!I just found a similar photo in Google. I don't remember the name of the company that produced it, I just remember how it looked. And even if a medicine or analyzer is exported, all its labels must be translated.
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