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Monitoring of dietary sodium intake by salt-meter decreases serum sodium and blood pressure in hemodialysis patients

Monitoring of dietary sodium intake by salt-meter may improve overhydration status in hemodialysis patients

Status
Active, not recruiting
Phases
Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Source
TCTR
Registry ID
TCTR20240804004
Enrollment
50
Registered
2024-08-04
Start date
2023-09-16
Completion date
Unknown
Last updated
2026-03-30

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Hypertension in ESRD Volume Overload Salt-meter in ESRD BIA and weight gain in ESRD

Interventions

Sponsors

Hemodialysis unit of Ramathibidi Hospital
Lead Sponsor

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
All
Age
18 Years to No maximum

Inclusion criteria

Inclusion criteria: 1. End stage renal disease patients undergoing chronic hemodialysis vintage more than 3 months. 2. Adults over 18 years old. 3. Patients who like a food with more water Exp. soup noodle. 4. Systolic Blood Pressure more than 140 mmHg or Diastolic Blood Pressure more than 90 mmHg. 5. Not to change of hypertensive drug less than 1 month. 6. Interdialytic weight gain more than 1 kg/day 7. Sign a consent form

Exclusion criteria

Exclusion criteria: 1. Patients with Bed ridden 2. Patients with loss of conscious or not full conscious 3. Patients with Unstable Hemodynamics 4. Patients with Hypertensive Emergency Systolic Blood Pressure more than 200 mmHg or Diastolic Blood Pressure more than 120 mmHg. 5. Patients with Limb Amputation 6. Patients with Advance Malignancy 7. Patients with waiting list KT in 6 months 8. Not to sign a consent form

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frame
Blood pressure 4 month blood pressure monitor,Weigth gain 4 month BIA

Secondary

MeasureTime frame
serum sodium 4 month salt meter

Countries

Thailand

Contacts

Public ContactWilaiporn Akkabut

Ramathibodi Hospital

Wilaipornakkabut@gmail.com0815565825

Outcome results

None listed

Source: TCTR (via WHO ICTRP) · Data processed: Apr 4, 2026