Yes
A diet high in protein lowers the pH of urine, making it more acidic.
acidic
No noticeably more acidic, no.
Restricting dietary salt and protein will help to control the excess of albumin in urine. Certain foods to include in your diet would be flaxseed, whole grains, whole fruits and vegetables.
Excessive protein in a horse's diet can result in kidney damage or outright destruction resulting in death. If the excess is mild, the protein is usually successfully excreted in the urine.
Yes. a High protein diet increase urine output. that is why the body builders consume a lot of protein. that help shed their water . But the greatest things for kidney is coconut water. In some countries that is the medicine that they use for low urine output, kidney disesase or high blood pressure
One of the quickest ways to reduce protein in your diet is to eliminate or reduce your consumption of meats. Beans are also another source of protein so avoiding them would be another alternative.
a protein-rich diet will result in more urea being present in ur urine.
Those who believe that vulvodynia may be caused by acidic, irritating oxalate crystals in the urine, recommend trying a low-carbohydrate, low-oxalate diet
A good protein diet plan that would make you lose weight but not gain muscle would be the Atkins diet. This is a diet that basically cuts out carbohydrates. www.atkins.com
A high protein diet has many benefits as long as exercise is following the diet. Eating a high protein diet without exercising regularly can be very dangerous.
Ketones are produced as a byproduct of fat metabolism, not protein metabolism. Elevated urine keytone levels can be either a sign of diet-induced ketosis or possible kidney disease. In either case, a high protein diet alone should not elevate keytone levels in urine. However, if a person is on a high-protein, high-fat and low-carbohydrate diet (for example Atkins or one of the other ketogenic diets out there), it would not be unusual to see elevated keytone levels in a urinanalysis. These keytones would be produced, however, as a result of the body metabolizing fat in the absence of carbohydrates, and not because of the higher protein intake.