Grocery Shopping

I was bored this morning, so I decided to go do some grocery shopping with my mom. Typically my parents do all the food shopping and cooking. In return, I pay all the other bills for the house, including property tax and all the utilities. Not sure if that is fair; my payments are about $1,200/month, mostly for property tax.

Before going to the market, we stopped by the Santa Ana Raising Canes for a quick lunch. I only got the chicken fingers so to avoid extra carbs from the fries and Texas toast. I was looking forward to this since it has been several months since I ate there, but it was very disappointing. There was actually a line and a good 10 minute wait for the chicken fingers. Because of the delay, I was expecting fresh (hot) chicken finger, but they were just kinda warm and a bit soggy. Next time, I am going back to the Tustin branch .

The next disappointment was at Albertsons. We went to a different store that was on the way home. This store was bigger than the one closest to our house, so I was expecting them to have more stock. The most important item to get was the Pepsi Zero Sugar Mango. Both Pepsi and Coca Cola 12 packs were 3/$10.99. However, there was only regular Pepsi Zero Sugar on the shelf. I did see regular Pepsi with Mango, but that will definitely spike my blood sugar. Anyway, long story short, I ended up getting some Diet Coke, and a 12 pack of Diet Dr. Pepper. I know Dr. Pepper is the go to beverage for a lot of people, but I was never really into it. Ever since picking up diet soda again for the phosphorus, I have been looking for more variety of flavors so I thought I would give it a try.

In total, I spent about $50 today since I also got some more frozen entrées and other stuff. I also found some no sugar ice cream from Breyers. There must have been over a hundred types of ice cream in the freezer aisle, but this the only diabetic ice cream I could find. I thought there were a lot of diabetics in the US. Is there no demand for the special ice cream, or are people just eating regular full-sugar ice cream?

Nutritional information for the flavor I bought: vanilla chocolate strawberry. The ice cream is sweeting using sucralose, which is what is in Splenda. The important numbers are: 17 g of carbs, 0 g of added sugar (8 g of sugar alcohol), and 150 mg of potassium. Their regular vanilla chocolate strawberry ice cream has 20 g of carbs, 15 g of added sugar, and 170 mg of potassium. There is also twice the amount of fats and cholesterol. Hopefully it tastes ok.

Too Much Weight Loss

My dialysis nutritionist told me to stop losing weight. She said it’s not good to be too skinny for the transplant procedure. I remember the vascular surgeon commenting that I was too fat during the peritoneal dialysis catheter insertion surgery but that worked out okay. Since I’ve always been overweight as far as I can remember, it’s weird to have a medical person tell you you’re too skinny. She told me to eat more meat and protein so that when they remove excess fluid, I don’t lose more “dry” weight.

My nephrologist lowered my weight again to 78.0 kg since that is my latest post-dialysis weight for several days now. We’re removing about 3 liters of fluid per session and I’m trying to drink less so we get the last bit of excess fluid in my lungs and lower legs. I have not heard back regarding results of the last echocardiogram but it should show a lot less fluids in my lungs compared to a month ago.

Tri-tip from Stonefire Grill

I’m trying to eat more, which again, is a weird feeling. I ordered a large meal from Stonefire Grill tonight; my parents are going to pick it up right now. I’m also drinking a protein shake from Nepro or Novasource daily in case I don’t get enough from meals. I also have to start exercising more, otherwise all I’ll gain is fat, which is not good for my “new” heart. Sigh… life is so complicated.

Take-Out Lunch: Raising Cane’s

Last Tuesday after dialysis, I decided to get lunch at Raising Cane’s in Tustin. I used to go there about once a month to get lunch on Sunday but haven’t been there since the heart surgery. At first glance, I should be staying away from fried chicken tenders and french fries, but I had a craving all day Tuesday so I stopped by and got a Box Combo. Instead of ordering at the drive-through board, they had two employees standing at the side of the drive-through lane to take orders. I paid by credit card, making sure I wiped it down with hand sanitizer after getting it back from the cashier. I gave my parents the Coleslaw and Texas Toast but ate most of the rest. It was yummy. Here is the nutritional information:

Nutritional InformationBox ComboSweet TeaTexas ToastColeslaw
Calories1,300140150100
Fat Calories66004560
Total Fat73 g0 g5 g6 g
Saturated Fat11 g0 g1.5 g1 g
Trans Fat1 g0 g0 g0 g
Cholesterol170 mg0 mg0 mg5 mg
Sodium2,120 mg15 mg290 mg310 mg
Carbohydrates100 g36 g24 g11 g
Sugar17 g36 g5 g7 g
Protein60 g0 g4 g1 g
Raising Cane’s website

In hindsight, it wasn’t the healthiest lunch. There is a lot of fat and sodium. Even if you remove the Coleslaw and Texas Toast, it still ~1,600 mg of sodium. I guess if I didn’t eat too much for breakfast and dinner, it’s probably okay. If you look at the individual chicken finger, it’s only 180 mg of sodium each, or 720 mg for all four. A lot of sodium is actually in Cane’s Sauce which appears to be a spicy ranch dressing. Maybe I’ll just get the 3 Finger Combo next time.

Ramen Lunch Nutrition

I had lunch with a friend today. He came by work to pick me up and we went to Shin-Sen-Gumi Hakata Ramen in Gardena. I’m always worried about eating here because the ramen broth is probably very salty so I try not to drink any of it outside of slurping the noodles. Their website does not provide any nutritional information but I found some on MyFitnessPal:

Nutritional ItemHakata Ramen
Calories850
Total fat26 g
Saturated fat5 g
Trans fatNA
Cholesterol30 g
Sodium1,000 mg
Protein21 g
Calcium11%
PotassiumNA
myfitnesspal.com
Hakata Ramen

The nutritional information looks wrong. There’s got to be more fat in the bowl of ramen. You get two pieces of chashu pork, which has a ton of fat, plus all the grease in the ramen broth. I also think there’s more than 1,000 mg of sodium. I also had a small beef bowl (gyudon) for lunch so add more fat, sodium, and carbs to the info above.

Good thing I skipped the breakfast burrito at work this morning.

Breakfast Burritos at Work

I love breakfast burritos with bacon, though I haven’t had any since my heart surgery. At work, the cafeteria usually has a breakfast burrito available every morning but the ingredients vary by week. This week, the description says Bacon Jalapeno Breakfast Burrito: Eggs, Potatoes and Bacon-Jalapeno Cheese Sauce wrapped in a Flour Tortilla served with a Side. I thought about getting it but then I looked at the nutritional information:

Nutritional ItemBreakfast BurritoItalian SandwichHot Dogs
Serving size272 g377 g326 g
Calories6408701,000
Total fat33 g47 g70 g
Saturated fat12 g18 g26 g
Trans fat0.5 g0 g3 g
Cholesterol190 mg115 g120 mg
Sodium1,260 mg2,600 mg2,610 mg
Total Carbohydrates64 g70 g62 g
Dietary fiber0 g1 g0 g
Total sugars4 g8 g8 g
Protein22 g43 g34 g
Calcium211 mg369 mg80 mg
Potassium402 mg379 mgNA
Work intranet menu

Ugh, that’s a lot of saturated fat and sodium. I would have to cut back a lot on the rest of my meals today if I ate the burrito for breakfast. Also, if there’s nothing good on the menu for lunch, I usually wait until 2:00 pm and get an Italian Sandwich. I thought I was being healthy but looking at the nutritional information, it’s worse than the burrito. The ingredients contain: Salami, Ham, Capicola, Provolone, Shredded Lettuce, Tomato, Onion, Oregano, Vinegar, EVOO, and Sweet Peppers on a Hoagie Roll. I think all the different meats have lots of fat and sodium. We also get a small bag of potato chips with the sandwich but I’ve been giving that away.

Yummy but super salty

The other post lunch food choice is Two All Beef Hot Dogs on Potato Buns. I used to get this too but stopped due to all the phosphates in hot dog wieners. I also put a lot of ketchup and onions on the hot dogs, which probably adds even more sodium. It appears to be the worst choice for lunch nutritionally. Why does everything that tastes good so bad for you?

I guess it’s hard to estimate the nutritional information by taste alone.

Lunch 2/21/2020

I ate lunch at work today. Usually I try to go out to for lunch on Fridays, either to a food truck on-site, or to a restaurant. Today, I had too many meetings so there was only time for the cafeteria. I got steak, rice, potatoes, dinner roll, and some peas. Here is the “official” nutritional info for lunch:

ItemSteakRice PilafPotatoesDinner RollPeasTotal
Serving Size198 g113 g113 g51 g113 g588 g
Calories390200120130140980
Total Fat20 g9 g3 g2.5 g8 g42.5 g
Saturated Fat8 g0.5 g0 g0 g5 g13.5 g
Cholesterol100 mg0 mg0 mg0 mg20 mg120 mg
Sodium550 mg95 mg95 mg260 mg140 mg1,140 mg
Total Carbs9 g28 g22 g21 g14 g94 g
Dietary Fiber3 g0 g2 gNA5 g10 g
Total Sugars4 g0 g2 g0 g5 g11 g
Protein40 g3 g3 g6 g5 g57 g
Calcium100 mg14 mg15 mg26 mg30 mg185 mg
Potassium630 mg48 mg601 mg0 mg233 mg1,512 mg
Yummy lunch

First, it felt much heavier than 588 g so maybe the serving sizes were not accurate. The servers spoon the items from large serving trays so there must be a lot of variability. I also didn’t finished all the potatoes so only count ~50% of the numbers. Anyway, I’m surprised at how much sodium and potassium is in everything. Nothing tasted particularly salty but the meal contained >50% of recommended daily value for sodium. Likewise for potassium. Both beef and potatoes contain a lot of potassium. Also, lots of carbs in rice, potatoes, and bread. Each was ~10% of DV for total carbohydrates.

At least it’s healthier than getting the burger and fries.

Work Cafeteria Food

When there’s nothing good to eat at work, I used to get a burger and fries as a default option. Since coming back to work post-surgery, I’ve been more focused on nutrition. Here’s the nutrition info; not sure if it’s accurate though:

Nutrition ItemBurgerFriesTotal
Serving size318 g198 g
Calories9502801230
Total Fat63 g8 g71 g
Saturated Fat26 g2.5 g28.5 g
Trans Fat0 g0 g0 g
Cholesterol205 mg0 mg205 mg
Sodium970 mg35 mg1,005 mg
Total Carbs52 g44 g96 g
Dietary Fiber0 gNANA
Total Sugars9 g0 g9 g
Protein44 g2 g46 g
Calcium347 mg0 mg347 mg
Potassium76 mgNANA
Company food website

Wow, 28.5 mg of saturated fat. The daily value assuming a 2,000 calorie diet is only 20 mg. Also there was no info for potassium for the fries but potato usually has pretty high potassium content. I think it’s good to avoid the burger and fries combo or I’m going to start clogging my new heart.

Based on experience, I’m pretty sure the sodium number is too low. They sprinkle salt on the fries so there’s no way it’s only 35 mg. I’ve had soup from the cafeteria that were so salty that it burned my throat.

More Protein Shakes

There are a lot more brands of protein shakes than just Ensure. I only compared Nepro and Ensure because Nepro is practically the only product designed specifically for dialysis patients, and we have a lot of Ensure High Protein at home already. I did a search of Amazon for the most popular protein shakes and got this list. The Nepro column is in there for comparison; it’s not that popular:

BrandNeproPremier ProteinBoost High ProteinOrgain CleanEnsure Max ProteinCore PowerMuscle MilkIconic
FlavorMixed BerryCafé LatteRich ChocolateRich ChocolateMilk ChocolateChocolateChocolateCafé Latte
Serving Size8 oz11 oz8 oz11 oz11 oz11.5 oz11 oz11.5 oz
Calories425160240140150240160130
Total Fat22.7 g3 g6 g2 g1.5 g3.5 g4.5 g2 g
Sat. Fat2.0 g0.5 g1 g0.5 g0.5 g2 g1 g0 g
Cholesterol6.5 mg20 mg10 mg16 mg20 mg15 mg15 mg10 mg
Sodium250 mg220 mg230 mg240 mg140 mg160 mg250 mg220 mg
Total Carbs37.9 g5 g28 g10 g6 g28 g7 g8 g
Protein19.1 g30 g20 g20 g30 g26 g25 g20 g
Calcium250 mg650 mg (50%)380 mg (30%)50%50%70%30%25%
Potassium250 mg360 mg (8%)470 mg (10%)300 mg (9%)10%600 mg (17%)770 mg (22%)380 mg (11%)
Phosphorus170 mg620 mg (50%)25%NA40%NA40%40%
Amazon24/$57.00*12/$23.9924/$28.9812/$20.9112/$26.1612/$23.7912/$9.2812/$33.99
Price/serving$2.38$2.00$1.21$1.74$2.18$1.98$0.77$2.83
*Price direct from Abbott Store

Once again, Nepro seems to be the fat bomb with the most fat, carbs, and calories per serving. What I’m most worried about however, is the levels of potassium (K) and phosphorus (P). Since Nepro was designed for dialysis patients, it makes sense that it would have low levels of both. Most of the other protein shakes listed have lots of both, assuming NA for P means at least 40% DV. If I wanted to keep both K and P low, then I’m stuck with Nepro or Ensure Original/Plus/High Protein. If I had to get something else, I guess Boost is a viable option, except it’s made by Nestlé, the evil food corporation.

Boost High Protein shake at Amazon

I wish Orgain would detail how much P there is per serving since everything else looks okay. The ingredients for the Clean Protein Shake includes sodium phosphate, magnesium phosphate, and tricalcium phosphate. Usually if there are several ingredients with something phosphate, there’s probably a lot of P in the product. There also seems to be a sale on Muscle Milk since it’s only $0.77 per carton. Maybe I can buy it for my mom since her kidneys are fine so the high levels of P and K is okay.

The best option is probably to eat well balanced meals so I don’t need to drink protein shakes. That’s not that easy now that I’m working again. Often, none of the food choices look appetizing to me. Also, it’s hard to figure out nutritional information for my parent’s home Chinese cooking.

Ensure® Comparison

After drinking a couple bottles of vanilla Ensure High Protein, I wanted to try some other flavors. There are lots of varieties of Ensure so I compared some nutrition values:

Nutritional ItemOriginalPlusHigh ProteinMax Protein
Serving Size8 oz8 oz8 oz11 oz
Calories220350160150
Total Fat6 g11 g2 g1.5 g
Saturated Fat1 g1 g0.5 g0.5 g
Cholesterol<5 mg10 mg20 mg20 mg
Sodium210 mg210 mg210 mg140 mg
Total Carbohydrate32 g50 g19 g6 g
Protein9 g13 g16 g30 g
Calcium25%25%40%50%
Potassium10%10%10%10%
Phosphorus15%15%25%40%
Vanilla flavor for all varieties

Looking at cholesterol and phosphorus levels, the original shake is probably best, though there is only 9 g of protein. After all, these are protein shakes. I wonder how Abbot decides on the nutritional content of each Ensure product. Do scientists or nutritionists come up with the recipe or does marketing?

Amazon seems to have the best prices: you can get a 24 packs for ~$26, or a 16 pack for $20. Target sells six packs for $8, which is more expensive but you don’t have to buy a lot at once. I think I want to try out the chocolate and the strawberry flavors. Abbott’s website lists a lot more flavors but they’re hard to find in stores.

Banana nut! Does that have more potassium than the other flavors?

Eating Out and Nutrition Tracking

My parents and I were planning to eat dinner at Souplantation last night. I’ve been trying to track my food intake with both Fitbit and MyFitnessPal apps on my phone. Since Souplantation has extensive nutritional information on their menu online, it’s easy to track. However, my dad ended up eating too much junk food in the afternoon so only my mom and I went to dinner in the end. Instead of Souplantation, we ate at a Japanese izakaya next door.

Bentos! We even made it in time for Happy Hour.

We ended up sitting at the sushi bar since there were no more tables, but neither one of us ate raw fish. It was weird sitting right in front of the sushi chefs and not ordering anything from them. My mom got a chicken teriyaki bento 照り焼きチキン, and I got some hot soba with shrimp tempura 天麩羅蕎麦 plus some fried tofu 揚げ出し豆腐. The food was pretty good; my mom wants to go back to eat already. However, there’s no nutritional information on their menu so I have to guess at my food intake. The soba didn’t taste that salty but I’m sure there’s quite a bit of sodium in the broth. Likewise, how much fat and phosphorus is there in the fried tofu? Do people who need to track their food intake closely just not eat out at small restaurants?

Hot homemade soba noodles

My friend and I are planning to meet for lunch today near my work. Usually we go to a hole-in-the-wall Vietnamese place. Obviously, they don’t post any nutritional information anywhere. I usually get their pho or egg noodles. The only nutritional information is salty.

Not the prettiest storefront but the food is really good

Chinese Nutrition

Since I only had a bottle of Ensure for dinner last night, and didn’t have any lunch today, my mom said we should go out to eat. My dad had to run an errand for my sister’s family so it was just the two of us. We decided to go to Boiling Point in Irvine. We got there around 6:30 pm and waited about 10 minutes for a table. If you’ve never been to Boiling Point, it’s a personal Taiwanese hot pot restaurant with pre-made soup/ingredient choices, and you can order additional items to put in your pot. It’s not all-you-can-eat but the amount of food is more than adequate.

Yummy… and only 459 calories!

I ordered a beef hot soup/pot with no spiciness. My mom ordered the seafood & tofu with mild spiciness. I remember ordering something with mild spiciness once and it was really spicy so I chickened out this time. That and I could only eat on one side of my mouth and the food was super hot (temperature). I was a bit worried about the nutritional content of their food because Chinese. I ate all of it anyway and looked up their nutrition info when I got home.

Nutrition ItemBeef Hot PotSeafood &
Tofu Hot Pot
Spicy
Fermented Tofu
Weight516.4 g378.3 g95.8 g
Calories459 kcal516 kcal101 kcal
Total Fat17 g23 g5.8 g
Sat Fat4.2 g6.2 g1 g
Trans Fat0.3 g0.1 g0 g
Cholestrol86.9 g142.4 g0 g
Sodium516.6 mg801.1 mg710.3 mg
Carbs38.5 g22.1 g6.9 g
Fiber5.7 g2.7 g1.3 g
Sugars6.5 g0.8 g4.6 g
Protein43.1 g54.8 g5.4 g
Boiling Point Nutrition Website

At first glance, it seems there are too many significant digits for sodium. How can you measure something to 0.1 mg precision? But if you look at the nutrition PDF file, it breaks down each menu item into it’s contents and provides nutrition info for each ingredient. So for my beef hot pot, a lot of the sodium comes from the Kamaboko (143.9 mg) and Kakiage tempura (132 mg). We also got the spicy fermented tofu appetizer. It wasn’t what I thought it would be: fried stinky tofu. On paper, it’s saltier than either of the hot pots.

Spicy Fermented Tofu. It was definitely spicy.

So, 459 calories and 517 mg of sodium is not bad. Both are about one-quarter of allowable daily value (DV). However, it tasted pretty salty and the soup was oily when I was done eating. I highly doubt the provided nutritional values are accurate. That’s the problem with eating at restaurants and eating prepackaged foods. You’re trusting that the ingredient list is what is actually in the food. I’m sure the chef is not measuring out salt to tenths of a milligram. Unless you cooked the meal yourself, you’re never really sure what is in there. At some point though, you have trust the info is accurate enough and make good food decisions.

Phosphorus

Reviewing the phosphorus content in nutrition shakes has got me wondering what the actual test result represent other than just high/low versus normal. I’ve received hundreds of pages of test results during the past few years but I don’t fully understand what they all mean. My last lab results for phosphorus was 4.2 mg/dL. I assume that is the concentration of phosphorus in my bloodstream. So if we use the 7% figure for blood/body weight, at 92 kg I have 6.44 liters of blood. Multiply that by 4.2 mg/dL gives me ~270 mg of phosphorus in my blood.

Phosphorus is an essential structural component of cell membranes and nucleic acids but is also involved in several biological processes, including bone mineralization, energy production, cell signaling through phosphorylation reactions, and regulation of acid-base homeostasis.

Linus Pauling Institute

I don’t know how much phosphorus the body uses daily so I’ll use their daily recommendation of 700 mg. If hemodialysis removes 800 mg per session, then that’s an average of 343 mg per day. Add my three Renvela tablets for a bit more (only about 50 mg), my intake allowance is ~1,100 mg per day. DaVita recommends a nutrition goal of 800 to 1,200 mg per day so it’s in the ballpark.

Ensure® vs. Nepro®, Phosphorus

Oops. We have the vanilla flavor Ensure High Protein at home, not the mile chocolate flavor. I like the taste of Ensure more than Nepro. There’s a weird aftertaste to Nepro and it lingers in your mouth for a long time. There’s also more of a milk taste to Ensure whereas Nepro just tastes artificial.

Ensure is also a lot cheaper. I buy Nepro directly from the Abbott store. If you get an order form from the dialysis nutritionist, the cost is $57 for a case of 24, or $2.38 each. Otherwise it’s $92 and prices are similar on Amazon. For Ensure, you can buy almost anywhere (Target, supermarkets) for $9/six-pack, or $1.50 each. On Amazon, it’s even cheaper.

Looking at the nutritional labels again, Ensure has 250 mg of phosphorus vs. 170 mg for Nepro. I take 800 mg of Renvela (Sevelamer Carbonate) each meal. This paper states that the phosphorus binding capacity for Renvela is only ~21 mg/g. That means it will take four of the huge tablets to absorb the excess phosphorus in Ensure. Another paper says dialysis only removes 800 mg of phosphorus per session so an extra 80 mg is not trivial. However, my phosphorus results from the last set of labs is in the middle of the normal range so maybe I have some room to indulge in Ensure instead of Nepro.

Ensure® vs. Nepro®

Today was a very long day. I had dialysis in the morning and found out I needed to extend my dialysis time. That was followed by a three hour dentist appointment that turned out to be very painful, and ended with an acupuncturist appointment that lasted until 7:00 pm. I had several temporary crowns put in at the dentist and was told not to eat on that side of the mouth. I was tired, half my face was on fire, so I ended up napping from ~9:00 pm to ~11:00 pm, skipping dinner.

“Mixed Berry” flavor protein shake

Typically when I skip a meal, I drink a container of Nepro. It’s a protein shake specifically made for dialysis patients by Abbott, the same company that makes Ensure. It also costs more than Ensure, even when I order directly from Abbott, and only has three flavors. Ensure has a lot more varieties and flavors. Since I also have bottles of Ensure High Protein at home, let’s comparison the nutrition labels. I’m going to use Nepro’s label as the base since it has more rows. Both come in 8 oz. containers.

NutrientsNeproEnsure High Protein
Protein19.1 g16 g
Total Fat22.7 g2 g
Saturated Fat2.0 g0.5 g
Transfat0 g
Polyunsat Fat4.1 g
Monounsat Fat16 g
Cholesterol6.5 mg20 mg
Carbohydrates37.9 g19 g
Dietary Fiber3.0 g< 1 g
Sugars8.4 g4 g
Glycerine2.6 g
L-Carnitine63 mg
Taurine38 mg
Water172 g
Calories425160
VitaminsDV*NeproEnsure High Protein
Vitamin A5,000 IU750 IU30% (1,500 IU)
Vitamin D400 IU20 IU120% (480 IU)
Vitamin E30 IU23 IU90% (27 IU)
Vitamin K80 mcg20 mcg30% (24 mcg)
Vitamin C60 mg25 mg100% (60 mg)
Folate/Folic Acid400 mcg250 mcg60% (240 mcg)
Vitamin B11.5 mg0.56 mg30% (0.45 mg)
Vitamin B21.7 mg0.64 mg30% (0.51 mg)
Vitamin B62 mg2.0 mg30% (0.6 mg)
Vitamin B126 mcg2.3 mcg30% (1.8 mcg)
Niacin20 mg7.5 mg30% (6 mg)
Choline150 mcg
Biotin300 mcg120 mcg30% (90 mcg)
Pantothenic Acid10 mg3.8 mg30% (3 mcg)
*DV (Daily Value) for vitamins and minerals from FDA
MineralsDV*NeproEnsure High Protein
Sodium2,400 mg250 mg135 mg
Potassium3,500 mg250 mg170 mg
Chloride3,400 mg200 mg
Calcium1,000 mg250 mg30% (300 mg)
Phosphorus1,000 mg170 mg25% (250 mg)
Magnesium400 mg50 mg15% (60 mg)
Iodine150 mcg38 mcg25% (38 mcg)
Manganese2 mg0.5 mg20% (0.4 mg)
Copper2 mg0.5 mg
Zinc15 mg6.4 mg35% (5.3 mg)
Iron18 mg4.5 mg40% (7.2 mg)
Selenium70 mcg18 mcg30% (21 mcg)
Chromium120 mcg30 mcg40% (48 mcg)
Molybdenum75 mcg19 mcg40% (30 mcg)
*DV (Daily Value) for vitamins and minerals from FDA

I always wanted to do this comparison since Ensure’s nutrition label has a lot of items listed with %DV instead of the actual amount. If you look at the lab result scorecard from dialysis, it only lists three minerals: potassium, phosphorus, and calcium. Ensure has slightly lower potassium and slightly higher phosphorus and calcium. The other major differences seems to be Nepro has a lot more calories/fat/carbs vs. Ensure, and slightly less cholesterol. All the other nutrition items seem to be similar between the two drinks. I also noticed that I take a 2,000 IU capsule of Vitamin D3 each day when DV is only 400 IU, and my Vitamin D lab results are still low.

I’m tired of “Mixed Berry” since it’s the only Nepro flavor I have; the other two flavors are even more gross. After an hour of typing and calculating DV, I think I’m going to drink a chocolate vanilla Ensure High Protein instead of Nepro.