Types Of Kidney Diseases
Kidneys are very important to us. Presence of kidney disease can be very devastating to a person especially if there is no active functioning of the kidneys. A kidney dialysis or transplant to replace the diseased kidney might be required in worst case scenarios.
There are however several types of disease of the kidney that are classified as worse than the others. There are kidney diseases which can be "acute" implying that it is on first onset, and "dronic" implying that there is slow decline in kidney function. Both of these kidney diseases might arise due to autoimmune disorders, toxins, medications and as well infections. The worsening of the kidney functions might also be brought about by disease such as diabetes and blood pressure, although it can occur gradually.
When kidneys leak out some certain fluids or substances, it brings in another classification. Hematuria or blood urine is one of these diseases. These can be caused by sickened kidneys leaking out blood cells from the capillaries in the kidneys.
Protenuira is another fairly common kidney disease and usually comes about when protein and mostly albumin leaks out from the body. It can sometimes become so developed that there are instances where there is barely enough proteins in the body. Basically, without protein, fluid will leak all over the body (a condition referred to as "nephritic syndrome". This is always not good as we need the protein to keep the blood flowing in their vessels.
Kidney stones presence is another kidney disease where a patient excretes too much calcium oxalate into the urine and fails to drink enough water. Kidney stones might as well be caused by uric acid. Precipitation of the uric acid into stones makes it hard for them to fit in the uterus. Usually extreme pain is experienced and might result into infections as well.
Hypertension or the medications treating it might result into kidney disease. There are cases where one or both arteries leading to the kidneys are blocked forcing the kidney to release vasopressin which makes the blood pressure to rise dramatically. There are however specific blood pressure medication that can address these problems or in some cases surgery is administered to the blockage.
Chronic pyelonephritis occurs when infection gets deeper in the kidneys hence causing a lot of pain and kidney inflammation. It can as well result from hematuria.
There is however one primary disease that is cancerous and the cancer may further cause a lot of pain or bleeding in the kidney areas. This is always referred to as renal cell carcinoma which is usually treated by the replacement of the sick kidney(s)
All these diseases have early symptoms are expressed in a form that can recognize, find out the causes of the disease is the best way to get effective treatment and prevention best
Showing posts with label Problems Kidney. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Problems Kidney. Show all posts
Sunday, June 29, 2014
Tuesday, June 24, 2014
Stage 4 Kidney Disease
Stage 4 Kidney Disease
There is no likelihood of both kidneys failing at once when a case of chronic kidney is reported. There is always a slow progression of the disease over a period of years. This means that doctors have an opportunity to do something in order to prevent the chronic kidney disease situation from getting worse in case there is early diagnosis.
The National Kidney Foundation has come up with subdivisions that describe five stages through which patients of kidney disease go through. This demarcation of stages is meant to enable caregivers to do their work more efficiently in order for patients to live a higher-quality life.
Each level of the kidney disease requires special forms of treatment and care. Glomerular filtration rate is a measure of kidney function, which enables doctors to know the stage of disease that the patient is in. This function requires many variables include ones age, gender, race, and serum creatinine. This means that a doctor should order that a blood test be done. Creatinine is a waste product of muscular activity in the body. As the kidney continues to fail, levels of creatinine continue to rise.
Stage 4 kidney disease is characterized by advanced damage to the kidney. The decrease in Glomerular filtration rate that is recorded confirms that the patient's disease is in stage 4. Such a patient requires dialysis. Moreover, a kidney transplant should be carried out within the shortest time possible.
When there is a decline in kidney function, it results in a build-up of wastes in the patient's blood. This condition is known as uremia. At stage 4, many complications arise. Some of the problems experienced relate to anemia, high blood pressure, heart and bone diseases.
The symptoms that characterize stage 4 kidney disease include fatigue, sleep problems and nausea. Anemia makes patients feel very tired. This is because the kidney is unable to control the amount of fluid that is retained by the body. The legs swell, a condition known as edema. If there are protein deposits in the urine, it becomes very foamy. In case it contains blood, it turns reddish or tea-colored. A person urinates less often or he might urinate too often.
At stage 4, many patients experience kidney pain. One can easily locate the source of pain by touching the region that is near the kidneys. It also becomes difficult to get any sleep. One may also experience itchy feelings, restlessness and general discomfort that make it difficult to get sleep.
There is no likelihood of both kidneys failing at once when a case of chronic kidney is reported. There is always a slow progression of the disease over a period of years. This means that doctors have an opportunity to do something in order to prevent the chronic kidney disease situation from getting worse in case there is early diagnosis.
The National Kidney Foundation has come up with subdivisions that describe five stages through which patients of kidney disease go through. This demarcation of stages is meant to enable caregivers to do their work more efficiently in order for patients to live a higher-quality life.
Each level of the kidney disease requires special forms of treatment and care. Glomerular filtration rate is a measure of kidney function, which enables doctors to know the stage of disease that the patient is in. This function requires many variables include ones age, gender, race, and serum creatinine. This means that a doctor should order that a blood test be done. Creatinine is a waste product of muscular activity in the body. As the kidney continues to fail, levels of creatinine continue to rise.
Stage 4 kidney disease is characterized by advanced damage to the kidney. The decrease in Glomerular filtration rate that is recorded confirms that the patient's disease is in stage 4. Such a patient requires dialysis. Moreover, a kidney transplant should be carried out within the shortest time possible.
When there is a decline in kidney function, it results in a build-up of wastes in the patient's blood. This condition is known as uremia. At stage 4, many complications arise. Some of the problems experienced relate to anemia, high blood pressure, heart and bone diseases.
The symptoms that characterize stage 4 kidney disease include fatigue, sleep problems and nausea. Anemia makes patients feel very tired. This is because the kidney is unable to control the amount of fluid that is retained by the body. The legs swell, a condition known as edema. If there are protein deposits in the urine, it becomes very foamy. In case it contains blood, it turns reddish or tea-colored. A person urinates less often or he might urinate too often.
At stage 4, many patients experience kidney pain. One can easily locate the source of pain by touching the region that is near the kidneys. It also becomes difficult to get any sleep. One may also experience itchy feelings, restlessness and general discomfort that make it difficult to get sleep.
Renal Kidney Disease.
Renal Kidney Disease.
The kidneys are body organs responsible for the expulsion of waste products from the body system, usually in form of urine. When they fail, the condition is known as Chronic Renal Failure or simply as Renal Failure. Renal kidney disease is affects the kidneys, whereby there is a systematic decline in kidney function and urine output over time.
Mild renal kidney disease is whereby the condition of the kidney has not escalated to the point of Chronic Renal Failure or Chronic kidney disease. However, mild kidney disease can cause increased blood pressure and frequent urination at night. It can also lead to anemia and risk of heart attacks and strokes.
Many people suffering from renal kidney disease are usually unaware, until the later stages where it has worsened to the chronic level, then eventually to kidney failure. This is because the early signs can pass unnoticed, and it may take quite a while, even several years, from the condition to go from mild to chronic kidney disease to kidney failure. In fact, some people may live with kidney disease to chronic levels without ever reaching the point of kidney failure in their entire life.
However, it is very important to be aware if one is having this condition. Knowing about the symptoms of kidney disease can be helpful in getting timely treatment. The following are some of the symptoms of renal kidney disease.
Kidneys are the organs that make urine. Therefore, when the kidneys are failing, the urine becomes frequent with the person having to urinate several times at night. The urine becomes pale, may contain a lot of foam and traces of blood. Others are less frequent and smaller amounts than usual, and difficulty urinating.
Other symptoms include swelling of the legs, ankles, hands and feet. This is because the extra waste fluid in the body cannot be removed due to renal kidney disease. The person feels unusual and constant fatigue, severe itching of the skin, and bad breath or foul taste in the mouth, in addition to loss of appetite. Loss of appetite leads to weight loss. In addition, the person feels nauseated and vomits a lot.
Others include dizziness and diminished concentration, cold, difficulties in breathing, and sometimes the victim may also have back pains. Severe renal kidney disease leads to excessive retention of waste products in the body, and this makes dialysis necessary.
The kidneys are body organs responsible for the expulsion of waste products from the body system, usually in form of urine. When they fail, the condition is known as Chronic Renal Failure or simply as Renal Failure. Renal kidney disease is affects the kidneys, whereby there is a systematic decline in kidney function and urine output over time.
Mild renal kidney disease is whereby the condition of the kidney has not escalated to the point of Chronic Renal Failure or Chronic kidney disease. However, mild kidney disease can cause increased blood pressure and frequent urination at night. It can also lead to anemia and risk of heart attacks and strokes.
Many people suffering from renal kidney disease are usually unaware, until the later stages where it has worsened to the chronic level, then eventually to kidney failure. This is because the early signs can pass unnoticed, and it may take quite a while, even several years, from the condition to go from mild to chronic kidney disease to kidney failure. In fact, some people may live with kidney disease to chronic levels without ever reaching the point of kidney failure in their entire life.
However, it is very important to be aware if one is having this condition. Knowing about the symptoms of kidney disease can be helpful in getting timely treatment. The following are some of the symptoms of renal kidney disease.
Kidneys are the organs that make urine. Therefore, when the kidneys are failing, the urine becomes frequent with the person having to urinate several times at night. The urine becomes pale, may contain a lot of foam and traces of blood. Others are less frequent and smaller amounts than usual, and difficulty urinating.
Other symptoms include swelling of the legs, ankles, hands and feet. This is because the extra waste fluid in the body cannot be removed due to renal kidney disease. The person feels unusual and constant fatigue, severe itching of the skin, and bad breath or foul taste in the mouth, in addition to loss of appetite. Loss of appetite leads to weight loss. In addition, the person feels nauseated and vomits a lot.
Others include dizziness and diminished concentration, cold, difficulties in breathing, and sometimes the victim may also have back pains. Severe renal kidney disease leads to excessive retention of waste products in the body, and this makes dialysis necessary.
Kidney Disease Support
Kidney Disease Support
Chronic or Acute renal diseases can lead to renal failure. This failure may be complete or partial. Such patients require different kind of measures to support them and to maintain the normal physiological processes.
Hamemolysis:
Haemodialysis has saved many a kidney patient's life. It is very useful in chronic renal failure. It is useful when the uremia has become very severe An arteri venous fistula should be formed in the forearm, when the plasma creatinine is consistently above 600 micromol/ l .
Haemodialysis is carried out for 4-6 hours 3 times in a week, and many patients are trained to do it themselves. Within the first 6 weeks, there is a gradual reduction of the Uremic symptoms. Plasma creatinine and blood urea, do not return to normal, and anemia may improve but persists and osteodystophy may progress.
Continuous Ambulatory Peritoneal Dialysis:
This is a form of long term dialysis and involves insertion of a permanent intra peritoneal catheter in to the abdominal cavity. This procedure involves introduction of sterile dialysis fluid in to the peritoneal or abdominal cavity. The normal or usual quantity used is around two litres and then these two litres of fluid are allowed to remain in the peritoneal cavity. After about six hours, this fluid is again extracted out and disposed off. Now the abdomen is again perfused with a fresh sterile dialysis fluid. This alternate extraction and perfusion process is carried out repeatedly for about four times in a day. The best part is that it does not require the patient to be in bed and can move about and also do his regular routine work.
It is particularly useful for young children and the elderly patients with other diseases like cardio vascular instability and diabetes.
Patients have been known to continue, for 5 years on this treatment and it seems to be quite safe.
Renal transplantation:
This offers the possibility of restoring normal kidney functions and thereby correcting the many different electrolyte and metabolic dysfunctions of uraemia. The graft is usually taken from a cadaver donor or a coborn or the father or the mother.
Unless there is some support system available chronic renal diseases are always fatal. Information about the long term prognosis of patients on dialysis or transplant is really limited, because it has been recently started, but technology is changing fast now. Yet dialysis and transplantation can be considered as highly effective forms of treatment. There is an average of 80% survival of 5 years for patients on haemodialysis, 65% for transplanted kidney.
Chronic or Acute renal diseases can lead to renal failure. This failure may be complete or partial. Such patients require different kind of measures to support them and to maintain the normal physiological processes.
Hamemolysis:
Haemodialysis has saved many a kidney patient's life. It is very useful in chronic renal failure. It is useful when the uremia has become very severe An arteri venous fistula should be formed in the forearm, when the plasma creatinine is consistently above 600 micromol/ l .
Haemodialysis is carried out for 4-6 hours 3 times in a week, and many patients are trained to do it themselves. Within the first 6 weeks, there is a gradual reduction of the Uremic symptoms. Plasma creatinine and blood urea, do not return to normal, and anemia may improve but persists and osteodystophy may progress.
Continuous Ambulatory Peritoneal Dialysis:
This is a form of long term dialysis and involves insertion of a permanent intra peritoneal catheter in to the abdominal cavity. This procedure involves introduction of sterile dialysis fluid in to the peritoneal or abdominal cavity. The normal or usual quantity used is around two litres and then these two litres of fluid are allowed to remain in the peritoneal cavity. After about six hours, this fluid is again extracted out and disposed off. Now the abdomen is again perfused with a fresh sterile dialysis fluid. This alternate extraction and perfusion process is carried out repeatedly for about four times in a day. The best part is that it does not require the patient to be in bed and can move about and also do his regular routine work.
It is particularly useful for young children and the elderly patients with other diseases like cardio vascular instability and diabetes.
Patients have been known to continue, for 5 years on this treatment and it seems to be quite safe.
Renal transplantation:
This offers the possibility of restoring normal kidney functions and thereby correcting the many different electrolyte and metabolic dysfunctions of uraemia. The graft is usually taken from a cadaver donor or a coborn or the father or the mother.
Unless there is some support system available chronic renal diseases are always fatal. Information about the long term prognosis of patients on dialysis or transplant is really limited, because it has been recently started, but technology is changing fast now. Yet dialysis and transplantation can be considered as highly effective forms of treatment. There is an average of 80% survival of 5 years for patients on haemodialysis, 65% for transplanted kidney.
Kidney Disease Stages
Kidney Disease Stages
The symptoms in kidney disease stages are quite faint that it might usually take a couple of years to realize that a person has kidney disease. At the end of the day, you should have an idea whether you are at risk through studying the stages through which the malady is depicted. Always know so many kidney symptoms could be caused by other kinds of disease other than kidney associated malady, while the only superb way to confirm this being a regular checkup through your doctor.
The first stage in kidney diseases is only a mild damage. If you are undergoing the blood creatnine test, it will show the GFR to be between 90 and 100. GFR is Glomerular Filtration Rate in full. It is a determining factor in ascertaining how the kidneys are working. At this stage you might not notice anything.
In the second stage of Kidney diseases, The GFR will be around 60-89. At this stage, it is not easy to have symptoms at all, although the urine protein might start showing. Foamy urine is a perfect protein indication. In the third stage of kidney disease, you begin noticing an increase in the times you are urinating at night. At this stage you might feel overtly fatigued as you notice some signs of Anemia. You might even begin to experience some cramps in your legs or have a very itchy dry skin, while your GFR rate is 60 and below.
In the fourth kidney disease stage, you might have to visit a nutritionist who will offer you some special kinds of diet that might work towards the curtailing of sodium, potassium and phosphorus. At this stage, you might begin to have less urine than it is the normal case as you retain fluids, where you have your extreme swelling and edema, feeling holistically unwell. It is at this stage that together with your doctor you might want to make some future plans to have a dialysis of some kind. The GFR will be likely showing 15-29 results, signifying a huge loss in the function of the kidney.
At the fifth stage, you are at a very critical stage of your own kidney failure. At this stage, the symptoms are rather obvious in a high degree, where you have extreme swelling, vomiting and nausea as well as almost no production of urine or just a teaspoonful if you are lucky. At this stage, the kidneys have not been able to filter anything, signifying you are under dialysis for your own survival. The doctor could have taking some medications that include potassium and calcium binders so that the toxins in the blood might be kept down during the dialysis treatments.
The symptoms in kidney disease stages are quite faint that it might usually take a couple of years to realize that a person has kidney disease. At the end of the day, you should have an idea whether you are at risk through studying the stages through which the malady is depicted. Always know so many kidney symptoms could be caused by other kinds of disease other than kidney associated malady, while the only superb way to confirm this being a regular checkup through your doctor.
The first stage in kidney diseases is only a mild damage. If you are undergoing the blood creatnine test, it will show the GFR to be between 90 and 100. GFR is Glomerular Filtration Rate in full. It is a determining factor in ascertaining how the kidneys are working. At this stage you might not notice anything.
In the second stage of Kidney diseases, The GFR will be around 60-89. At this stage, it is not easy to have symptoms at all, although the urine protein might start showing. Foamy urine is a perfect protein indication. In the third stage of kidney disease, you begin noticing an increase in the times you are urinating at night. At this stage you might feel overtly fatigued as you notice some signs of Anemia. You might even begin to experience some cramps in your legs or have a very itchy dry skin, while your GFR rate is 60 and below.
In the fourth kidney disease stage, you might have to visit a nutritionist who will offer you some special kinds of diet that might work towards the curtailing of sodium, potassium and phosphorus. At this stage, you might begin to have less urine than it is the normal case as you retain fluids, where you have your extreme swelling and edema, feeling holistically unwell. It is at this stage that together with your doctor you might want to make some future plans to have a dialysis of some kind. The GFR will be likely showing 15-29 results, signifying a huge loss in the function of the kidney.
At the fifth stage, you are at a very critical stage of your own kidney failure. At this stage, the symptoms are rather obvious in a high degree, where you have extreme swelling, vomiting and nausea as well as almost no production of urine or just a teaspoonful if you are lucky. At this stage, the kidneys have not been able to filter anything, signifying you are under dialysis for your own survival. The doctor could have taking some medications that include potassium and calcium binders so that the toxins in the blood might be kept down during the dialysis treatments.
Kidney Disease Stage 3
Kidney Disease Stage 3
People who suffer from chronic kidney disease usually don't experience kidney failure all at one time. This is promising news for those with this condition because if CKD is detected early, drug therapies and lifestyle modifications can help slow down the generative process and will keep you feeling better for a longer duration.
A person who is in kidney disease stage 3 will have a moderate decline in there GFR of about 30-60 mil/min. As the kidneys decrease in their function to expel waste products from the body, these toxins can build up in the blood creating a condition called urumia.
In the case of having kidney disease in stage 3 is more susceptible to inheriting complications such as high blood pressure, anemia and premature bone disease.
Symptoms of kidney disease stage 3 are:
-Fatigue- feeling tired all of the time is common for those with CKD and is often a result of anemia.
-To much fluid retention- The kidneys can lose their ability to balance how much fluid remains in the body, causing edema( swelling) in their lower body, hands or face and can even cause shortness of breath.
- Changes in Urinary Function- Urine can become dark orange and can contain blood if there is too much protein present. This causes infrequent or frequent urination in patients.
- Back Pain- It is common that those who suffer from CKD to have lower and mid back pain.
- Insomnia- Troubled sleep patterns are often prevalent with CKD and may experience muscle cramping or restless leg syndrome that will interfere with their sleep patterns.
As a person enters into kidney disease stage 3, they are usually referred to a nephrologist for examination, testing, and treatments for the disease.
Also, a person might be referred to a dietician because diet is a very important part of treating kidney disease stage 3.
A diet low in protein, fat, calcium, sodium, and carbohydrates is usually recommended for this stage of CKD.
A healthy diet consisting of raw foods like fruits and vegetables, whole grains and lean meats is suggested for the patient so that the kidneys do not have to work as hard to break down fats and toxins.
The nephrologists goal is to determine that the patients suffering from kidney disease stage 3 receives the best possible treatment in order to keep the kidneys functioning for as long as possible.
People who suffer from chronic kidney disease usually don't experience kidney failure all at one time. This is promising news for those with this condition because if CKD is detected early, drug therapies and lifestyle modifications can help slow down the generative process and will keep you feeling better for a longer duration.
A person who is in kidney disease stage 3 will have a moderate decline in there GFR of about 30-60 mil/min. As the kidneys decrease in their function to expel waste products from the body, these toxins can build up in the blood creating a condition called urumia.
In the case of having kidney disease in stage 3 is more susceptible to inheriting complications such as high blood pressure, anemia and premature bone disease.
Symptoms of kidney disease stage 3 are:
-Fatigue- feeling tired all of the time is common for those with CKD and is often a result of anemia.
-To much fluid retention- The kidneys can lose their ability to balance how much fluid remains in the body, causing edema( swelling) in their lower body, hands or face and can even cause shortness of breath.
- Changes in Urinary Function- Urine can become dark orange and can contain blood if there is too much protein present. This causes infrequent or frequent urination in patients.
- Back Pain- It is common that those who suffer from CKD to have lower and mid back pain.
- Insomnia- Troubled sleep patterns are often prevalent with CKD and may experience muscle cramping or restless leg syndrome that will interfere with their sleep patterns.
As a person enters into kidney disease stage 3, they are usually referred to a nephrologist for examination, testing, and treatments for the disease.
Also, a person might be referred to a dietician because diet is a very important part of treating kidney disease stage 3.
A diet low in protein, fat, calcium, sodium, and carbohydrates is usually recommended for this stage of CKD.
A healthy diet consisting of raw foods like fruits and vegetables, whole grains and lean meats is suggested for the patient so that the kidneys do not have to work as hard to break down fats and toxins.
The nephrologists goal is to determine that the patients suffering from kidney disease stage 3 receives the best possible treatment in order to keep the kidneys functioning for as long as possible.
Kidney Diseases In Children
Kidney Diseases In Children
Chronic kidney illness of any kind in children is the most unwelcome news for any parent in the world. They subject children to lonely childhoods blighted with frequent illnesses and regular hospital visitations. A child who is supposed to grow happily is instead left attending hospital operations most of the time. The parents are not any better off as they are angry and depressed not to mention the high costs that they will have to incur in meeting the hospital bills.
For this reason and many others, it is of paramount importance that a parent learns to cope with these kidney diseases so that they can instill hope and courage in their children. It is important that they teach their children that these are normal diseases that can affect anyone so that their children may find the strength to grow up. They should make their children know that this is not the end of life and instead show them how to treat the disease including what drugs to take at when the symptoms are seen.
Kidney ailments in children may be acute or chronic.
Below are some of the kidney problems that children are likely to suffer from:
Hemolytic uremic syndrome
The above affects children mostly under the age of ten years.
This is a rare disease and one which has high chances of causing kidney failure. When a child eats foods that are contaminated with bacteria, they may get an infection of the digestive system. This causes diarrhea and vomiting. The child becomes restless and pale after the symptoms have subsided. The toxic substances produced by these bacteria may damage the kidney, leading to acute kidney failure. Children with this condition often need blood transfusion.
Nephrotic syndrome
A child with this condition tends to urinate less often, and the water left in the body causes swelling in the eyes, legs and the stomach. The small amount of urine that the body makes is concentrated and contains high levels of proteins. A healthy kidney will keep the protein in the blood but a defective one leaks the protein in the urine.
This condition is normally treated with prednisone to prevent the leakage of protein into the urine. The child is supposed to take small doses of prednisone and eventually come back to normalcy without permanent damage to their kidneys.
Detection of these diseases will help in mitigating their effects.
Chronic kidney illness of any kind in children is the most unwelcome news for any parent in the world. They subject children to lonely childhoods blighted with frequent illnesses and regular hospital visitations. A child who is supposed to grow happily is instead left attending hospital operations most of the time. The parents are not any better off as they are angry and depressed not to mention the high costs that they will have to incur in meeting the hospital bills.
For this reason and many others, it is of paramount importance that a parent learns to cope with these kidney diseases so that they can instill hope and courage in their children. It is important that they teach their children that these are normal diseases that can affect anyone so that their children may find the strength to grow up. They should make their children know that this is not the end of life and instead show them how to treat the disease including what drugs to take at when the symptoms are seen.
Kidney ailments in children may be acute or chronic.
Below are some of the kidney problems that children are likely to suffer from:
Hemolytic uremic syndrome
The above affects children mostly under the age of ten years.
This is a rare disease and one which has high chances of causing kidney failure. When a child eats foods that are contaminated with bacteria, they may get an infection of the digestive system. This causes diarrhea and vomiting. The child becomes restless and pale after the symptoms have subsided. The toxic substances produced by these bacteria may damage the kidney, leading to acute kidney failure. Children with this condition often need blood transfusion.
Nephrotic syndrome
A child with this condition tends to urinate less often, and the water left in the body causes swelling in the eyes, legs and the stomach. The small amount of urine that the body makes is concentrated and contains high levels of proteins. A healthy kidney will keep the protein in the blood but a defective one leaks the protein in the urine.
This condition is normally treated with prednisone to prevent the leakage of protein into the urine. The child is supposed to take small doses of prednisone and eventually come back to normalcy without permanent damage to their kidneys.
Detection of these diseases will help in mitigating their effects.
Kidney Disease Patients
Kidney Disease Patients
Kidney disease patients are very prone to cases of heart diseases as well as frequently pursuing a low-fat diet. The kind of calories the patients take in a day is required towards keeping their nutrition status as healthy as possible and avoiding the onset of failure of certain body tissues. For the Kidney disease patients, protein and weight status must be habitually observed.
You can find out that so many centers of dialysis have dietitians who are able to work with patients as well as physicians in teaching all the kidney disease patients all that pertains to their own diets whilst within the process of dialysis. Patients with abnormal kidney functions, they are stressed to take a diet containing low proteins as they aim to put off the deterioration of their ailing kidneys. This diet is generally low in terms of the potassium and sodium within. A number of patients also have fluid constraints elaborated while within the diet.
Additionally, in case you suffer from diabetes together with some other kidney diseases, you might need a low carbohydrate diet. Remember that diets with low proteins are able to put off as well as decelerating growth of some types of kidney diseases. The capacity of protein you take is well founded upon how your own kidneys can work as well as the sum total of proteins required for one to maintain a good health. After you have suffered cases of kidney failure, there is a high propensity of urine that your body generates dropping off.
Even the quantity of fluids you can take each passing day should be founded upon the quantity of the urine you do generate within 24 hours. Other concerns whether the amount of fluid should be constrained include the fluid quantity that you maintain sodium levels in the diet, utilization of diuretics as well as if you have any case of congestive heart problem and failure. The complications that come with kidney disease are quite secondary to symptoms, conditions or even other disorders that might affect diseases of the kidney.
You might sometimes find the distinction between complications and symptoms being quite ambiguous. Kidney disease patients who have diabetes can decrease considerably their complications' risk in case they get good information that relates to their own disease, as well as understanding and putting into amicable practices those skills that are needed, to easily control blood pressure, blood glucose, levels of cholesterol as well as going for occasional check-ups from a medical practitioner. Kidney patients who smoke must stop with immediate effect while the ones with weight must maintain moderate weight.
Kidney disease patients are very prone to cases of heart diseases as well as frequently pursuing a low-fat diet. The kind of calories the patients take in a day is required towards keeping their nutrition status as healthy as possible and avoiding the onset of failure of certain body tissues. For the Kidney disease patients, protein and weight status must be habitually observed.
You can find out that so many centers of dialysis have dietitians who are able to work with patients as well as physicians in teaching all the kidney disease patients all that pertains to their own diets whilst within the process of dialysis. Patients with abnormal kidney functions, they are stressed to take a diet containing low proteins as they aim to put off the deterioration of their ailing kidneys. This diet is generally low in terms of the potassium and sodium within. A number of patients also have fluid constraints elaborated while within the diet.
Additionally, in case you suffer from diabetes together with some other kidney diseases, you might need a low carbohydrate diet. Remember that diets with low proteins are able to put off as well as decelerating growth of some types of kidney diseases. The capacity of protein you take is well founded upon how your own kidneys can work as well as the sum total of proteins required for one to maintain a good health. After you have suffered cases of kidney failure, there is a high propensity of urine that your body generates dropping off.
Even the quantity of fluids you can take each passing day should be founded upon the quantity of the urine you do generate within 24 hours. Other concerns whether the amount of fluid should be constrained include the fluid quantity that you maintain sodium levels in the diet, utilization of diuretics as well as if you have any case of congestive heart problem and failure. The complications that come with kidney disease are quite secondary to symptoms, conditions or even other disorders that might affect diseases of the kidney.
You might sometimes find the distinction between complications and symptoms being quite ambiguous. Kidney disease patients who have diabetes can decrease considerably their complications' risk in case they get good information that relates to their own disease, as well as understanding and putting into amicable practices those skills that are needed, to easily control blood pressure, blood glucose, levels of cholesterol as well as going for occasional check-ups from a medical practitioner. Kidney patients who smoke must stop with immediate effect while the ones with weight must maintain moderate weight.
Kidney Disease Failure
Kidney Disease Failure
When you have your fear confirmed that you have kidney disease failure, the world might seem to have started collapsing on you. It signifies a gradual loss of the functions of kidney leading to catastrophic results. If you have chronic kidney disease and is left untreated, it might lead to kidney failure permanently, where those individuals with the disease might be at very chronic risks of death through stroke or heart attack.
In the early stages before kidney failure, the symptoms hardly suggest the kidneys are performing as desired, but as the kidney disease progresses, the patient might begin to be fatigued, have frequent urination, itchy and dry skin, nausea, appetite loss, feet and hands swelling, feet and hands numbness, concentration problems, muscle cramps and darkening of the skin and others. With or if you have risks of kidney disease failure, you might have complications including anemia, nerve damage, heart disease and nerve damage.
With the ESRD or End Stage Renal Disease, you are under the menace of near loss of your kidney function. After kidneys have reached ESRD you must know the kidney damage has reached a permanent stage and is totally irreversible. For the individuals who have been diagnosed with cases of ESRD they might need to go under the process of dialysis daily or consider kidney transplant so that they might survive. If the progress of the kidney disease is detected early, kidney disease failure could be slowed down.
Remember that two-thirds of basically all kidney disease come as a result of diabetes or high blood pressure, where controlling the blood glucose and blood pressure levels could be key in kidney disease prolonging. In addition, it is very much recommended that individuals having kidney disease follow up an eating plan with low proteins as they maintain the levels of their cholesterol, because high cholesterol has the tendency to cause cases of high blood pressure.
You might want to maintain a rather healthy weight as you quit smoking and you would have slowed the progression of the kidney disease and protecting a premature failure. You might want to consider the valuable doctor tests that could be performed in ascertaining if the kidneys are working and functioning as they should. Remember that only about fifty percent of the population with kidney disease know they have it.
When you have your fear confirmed that you have kidney disease failure, the world might seem to have started collapsing on you. It signifies a gradual loss of the functions of kidney leading to catastrophic results. If you have chronic kidney disease and is left untreated, it might lead to kidney failure permanently, where those individuals with the disease might be at very chronic risks of death through stroke or heart attack.
In the early stages before kidney failure, the symptoms hardly suggest the kidneys are performing as desired, but as the kidney disease progresses, the patient might begin to be fatigued, have frequent urination, itchy and dry skin, nausea, appetite loss, feet and hands swelling, feet and hands numbness, concentration problems, muscle cramps and darkening of the skin and others. With or if you have risks of kidney disease failure, you might have complications including anemia, nerve damage, heart disease and nerve damage.
With the ESRD or End Stage Renal Disease, you are under the menace of near loss of your kidney function. After kidneys have reached ESRD you must know the kidney damage has reached a permanent stage and is totally irreversible. For the individuals who have been diagnosed with cases of ESRD they might need to go under the process of dialysis daily or consider kidney transplant so that they might survive. If the progress of the kidney disease is detected early, kidney disease failure could be slowed down.
Remember that two-thirds of basically all kidney disease come as a result of diabetes or high blood pressure, where controlling the blood glucose and blood pressure levels could be key in kidney disease prolonging. In addition, it is very much recommended that individuals having kidney disease follow up an eating plan with low proteins as they maintain the levels of their cholesterol, because high cholesterol has the tendency to cause cases of high blood pressure.
You might want to maintain a rather healthy weight as you quit smoking and you would have slowed the progression of the kidney disease and protecting a premature failure. You might want to consider the valuable doctor tests that could be performed in ascertaining if the kidneys are working and functioning as they should. Remember that only about fifty percent of the population with kidney disease know they have it.
Kidney Disease Education
Kidney Disease Education
Kidney disease education centers have been established all over the world to provide support and to educate those who are diagnosed with late stage chronic kidney disease or kidney failure.
These kidney disease education centers provide information on transplants, hemodialysis, peritoneal dialysis, nutrition, family concerns and financial problems related to treatment options. There are qualified nurses, dietitians and social workers present at these centers to provide information, answer questions and educate those suffering from kidney disease. The patient's family members are strongly advised to participate in these sessions to show support and to cope with their loved ones who were diagnosed with kidney disease.
Professional institutions are making it their number one priority to educate and provide professional training facilities for nurses, dietitians and social workers and in developing patient education aids, so that families as caregivers are better experienced to handle patients with kidney disease. Most families are still getting over the shock of their loved one actually suffering from the disease, education programs are the best way of taking the shock and fear away from families by educating them.
There are other institutions such as community groups, public health agencies, youth groups, professional associations, charitable and voluntary organizations that are providing patients and their families suffering from kidney disease, educational aids and support networks.
The kidney disease education programs organized by various institutions help to provide the following,
Educate people with kidney disease on how to stay healthy
Taking control of the disease and in leading a normal life as much as possible
Provide education on the various stages of the disease and what to expect
How to prolong the disease
Medication that is available and what option to choose
How to maintain your life style and cope with the disease
Eating healthy
Indulging in normal activates and hobbies that the patient once loved doing
Emotional stress
Dealing with work pressure
Financial stress
General fear of the disease
Prolong the kidney function
A common playing field to share common problems and concerns associated with the disease
Improving the quality of life
What happens to the kidneys through different stages of kidney disease
How to cope with the various stages of kidney disease
Those who visit these kidney education centers have a lot of positive feedback to share and they look forward to visiting these education centers on a regular basis. Families are also finding these education centers rewarding and encouraging.
Kidney disease education centers have been established all over the world to provide support and to educate those who are diagnosed with late stage chronic kidney disease or kidney failure.
These kidney disease education centers provide information on transplants, hemodialysis, peritoneal dialysis, nutrition, family concerns and financial problems related to treatment options. There are qualified nurses, dietitians and social workers present at these centers to provide information, answer questions and educate those suffering from kidney disease. The patient's family members are strongly advised to participate in these sessions to show support and to cope with their loved ones who were diagnosed with kidney disease.
Professional institutions are making it their number one priority to educate and provide professional training facilities for nurses, dietitians and social workers and in developing patient education aids, so that families as caregivers are better experienced to handle patients with kidney disease. Most families are still getting over the shock of their loved one actually suffering from the disease, education programs are the best way of taking the shock and fear away from families by educating them.
There are other institutions such as community groups, public health agencies, youth groups, professional associations, charitable and voluntary organizations that are providing patients and their families suffering from kidney disease, educational aids and support networks.
The kidney disease education programs organized by various institutions help to provide the following,
Educate people with kidney disease on how to stay healthy
Taking control of the disease and in leading a normal life as much as possible
Provide education on the various stages of the disease and what to expect
How to prolong the disease
Medication that is available and what option to choose
How to maintain your life style and cope with the disease
Eating healthy
Indulging in normal activates and hobbies that the patient once loved doing
Emotional stress
Dealing with work pressure
Financial stress
General fear of the disease
Prolong the kidney function
A common playing field to share common problems and concerns associated with the disease
Improving the quality of life
What happens to the kidneys through different stages of kidney disease
How to cope with the various stages of kidney disease
Those who visit these kidney education centers have a lot of positive feedback to share and they look forward to visiting these education centers on a regular basis. Families are also finding these education centers rewarding and encouraging.
Kidney Disease Dialysis
Kidney Disease Dialysis
Your kidneys are primarily responsible for filtering the waste products in your blood for excretion. Basically, kidneys are the two bean-structured organs found on either side of the abdominal cavity, towards the back. In acute kidney complications, doctors may determine that a patient's kidneys are no longer functional. Nevertheless, the need to purify the blood still exists. This is where dialysis comes in.
As such, dialysis is a medical procedure that used to substitute for normal kidneys functions if the kidneys are dysfunctional. In most cases, a dialysis allows the kidney patient to normal, productive and healthy lives henceforth, despite having dysfunctional kidneys. In the US today, over 200,000 individuals are on dialysis in an ongoing basis.
By kidney disease dialysis, we refer to any kidney complications that result to the adoption of dialysis techniques. Essentially therefore, dialysis aides the body in performing those functions usually left to the kidneys in the event that an individual's kidneys fail.
A normal kidney has a host of roles in the body. Such roles include:
1. Regulating the body fluid balance
This is done by adjusting excreted urine and sweat volume such that when the body has less water, les urine and sweat are excreted through the kidneys and vice versa.
2. Removing waste products from the blood, that usually result from normal body processes like metabolism
3. Regulating chemical constituents of the blood to prevent build up of toxins or high levels of the chemicals that could be injurious to body cells
When dialysis techniques are adopted, the dialysis helps execute these functions. Before a patient is diagnosed to be in need of dialysis, the blood-borne wastes have accumulated in to very high levels. This shows that the kidneys are no longer functional. Although the toxin levels build up pretty gradually (Hence the usual delay in diagnosing kidney failure), when they do accumulate for a long time, they can be lethal.
Doctors can measure two main blood chemical levels while diagnosing the need for kidney diseases dialysis. These two blood chemical levels are creatinine level and blood urea nitrogen level. Their continued rise indicates a decreasing ability of an individual's kidneys to cleanse his or her blood.
Currently, we have two main types of kidney disease dialysis namely, hemodialysis and peritoneal dialysis. For hemodialysis, doctors use a special filter to effectively remove all excess waste products and any excess water from the blood. In peritoneal dialysis, doctors use a fluid (placed into the individual's stomach cavity via a plastic tube) so as to remove any excess fluids and waste products from the body.
Your kidneys are primarily responsible for filtering the waste products in your blood for excretion. Basically, kidneys are the two bean-structured organs found on either side of the abdominal cavity, towards the back. In acute kidney complications, doctors may determine that a patient's kidneys are no longer functional. Nevertheless, the need to purify the blood still exists. This is where dialysis comes in.
As such, dialysis is a medical procedure that used to substitute for normal kidneys functions if the kidneys are dysfunctional. In most cases, a dialysis allows the kidney patient to normal, productive and healthy lives henceforth, despite having dysfunctional kidneys. In the US today, over 200,000 individuals are on dialysis in an ongoing basis.
By kidney disease dialysis, we refer to any kidney complications that result to the adoption of dialysis techniques. Essentially therefore, dialysis aides the body in performing those functions usually left to the kidneys in the event that an individual's kidneys fail.
A normal kidney has a host of roles in the body. Such roles include:
1. Regulating the body fluid balance
This is done by adjusting excreted urine and sweat volume such that when the body has less water, les urine and sweat are excreted through the kidneys and vice versa.
2. Removing waste products from the blood, that usually result from normal body processes like metabolism
3. Regulating chemical constituents of the blood to prevent build up of toxins or high levels of the chemicals that could be injurious to body cells
When dialysis techniques are adopted, the dialysis helps execute these functions. Before a patient is diagnosed to be in need of dialysis, the blood-borne wastes have accumulated in to very high levels. This shows that the kidneys are no longer functional. Although the toxin levels build up pretty gradually (Hence the usual delay in diagnosing kidney failure), when they do accumulate for a long time, they can be lethal.
Doctors can measure two main blood chemical levels while diagnosing the need for kidney diseases dialysis. These two blood chemical levels are creatinine level and blood urea nitrogen level. Their continued rise indicates a decreasing ability of an individual's kidneys to cleanse his or her blood.
Currently, we have two main types of kidney disease dialysis namely, hemodialysis and peritoneal dialysis. For hemodialysis, doctors use a special filter to effectively remove all excess waste products and any excess water from the blood. In peritoneal dialysis, doctors use a fluid (placed into the individual's stomach cavity via a plastic tube) so as to remove any excess fluids and waste products from the body.
Kidney Disease Pain
Kidney Disease Pain
Patients who suffer from kidney disease that is associated with cormobid problems often experience a lot of pain. In this case, one should make use of analgesic medications since they have the ability to reduce nephrotoxic risks. A doctor should first examine the patient very carefully before determining which pain management approach is the best in each particular case.
There are many methods that a doctor can use in determining the best perspective of managing the pain. One of them is the non-comparative method. In this case, a clinical audit has to be relied on. In this case, the primary diagnosis has to be chronic kidney disease.
In most cases, kidney disease patients experience many types of pain. The best form of analgesics is that which is non-opioid in nature. The effect of these medications should be monitored very closely. If pain persists, the medication should be discontinued and alternative treatments opted for.
One should also understand that there are many reasons why pain comes about. One of the reasons why pain occurs is burdening the kidney with too many detoxification tasks which it is not able to effectively handle. After all this failure in itself is the one that constitutes the kidney disease.
In order for pain to be proactively controlled, it has to be incorporated into the holistic treatment program that is being undertaken by the doctor. For this reason, painkillers should be avoided at all costs. Additionally, every patient has some individual needs that need special attention. As a doctor it is important to base your treatment system on these needs. Matters of age and status of dependency will also determine the approach that the doctor takes in order to manage the pain.
Everyone who suffers from kidney disease as well as the pain which results from it should be given information on all helpful treatment options that exist. In case there are decisions that should be made by the patient, he should be given an opportunity to do so. It is imperative that health professionals learn how to overcome all barriers that come in the way of effect management of pain in kidney disease patients.
Pain that is associated with kidney disease can be as a result of surgery. It can also be as a result of peripheral neuropathy or even osteoarthritis. It is important to understand that these painful conditions also contribute to kidney disease pain. It is important for the appropriate pharmacological pain management measures to be taken depending on the cause of this pain.
Patients who suffer from kidney disease that is associated with cormobid problems often experience a lot of pain. In this case, one should make use of analgesic medications since they have the ability to reduce nephrotoxic risks. A doctor should first examine the patient very carefully before determining which pain management approach is the best in each particular case.
There are many methods that a doctor can use in determining the best perspective of managing the pain. One of them is the non-comparative method. In this case, a clinical audit has to be relied on. In this case, the primary diagnosis has to be chronic kidney disease.
In most cases, kidney disease patients experience many types of pain. The best form of analgesics is that which is non-opioid in nature. The effect of these medications should be monitored very closely. If pain persists, the medication should be discontinued and alternative treatments opted for.
One should also understand that there are many reasons why pain comes about. One of the reasons why pain occurs is burdening the kidney with too many detoxification tasks which it is not able to effectively handle. After all this failure in itself is the one that constitutes the kidney disease.
In order for pain to be proactively controlled, it has to be incorporated into the holistic treatment program that is being undertaken by the doctor. For this reason, painkillers should be avoided at all costs. Additionally, every patient has some individual needs that need special attention. As a doctor it is important to base your treatment system on these needs. Matters of age and status of dependency will also determine the approach that the doctor takes in order to manage the pain.
Everyone who suffers from kidney disease as well as the pain which results from it should be given information on all helpful treatment options that exist. In case there are decisions that should be made by the patient, he should be given an opportunity to do so. It is imperative that health professionals learn how to overcome all barriers that come in the way of effect management of pain in kidney disease patients.
Pain that is associated with kidney disease can be as a result of surgery. It can also be as a result of peripheral neuropathy or even osteoarthritis. It is important to understand that these painful conditions also contribute to kidney disease pain. It is important for the appropriate pharmacological pain management measures to be taken depending on the cause of this pain.
Kidney Disease Anemia
Kidney Disease Anemia
Research has established that patients suffering from chronic Kidney Disease have a high risk of developing an anemia condition. When a patient suffers from anemia after having a preexisting chronic kidney disease, we refer to that condition as kidney disease anemia.
The human blood incorporates two types of cells namely the white blood cells and the red blood cells. The white blood cells protect the body from infections while red blood cells primarily transport oxygen from your lungs to the muscle tissues throughout your body. Red blood cells are made up of a red protein called hemoglobin, which mixes with oxygen and is thus transmitted to muscle sites.
Now, anemia is the condition that results when a person has low numbers of the red blood cells in the blood. If the red blood cells are below normal, there will be a marked decrease in the available hemoglobin for oxygen transportation. To test the amount of red blood cells in the blood, medics conduct the hematocrit test, which basically represents a percentage of blood occupied by red blood cells.
If for instance you have 40% of each one ounce of your blood is occupied by the red blood cells, then you have a hematocrit of 40%. A normal hematocrit measure should be 36% to 51%. Men have a higher hematocrit level than normal women, given that women live with regular blood to the menstrual cycle. For one to be diagnosed of kidney disease anemia, he or she must display a hematocrit less than 42%. If it is less than 36%, the anemia is acute.
So what is the connection between kidney disease and anemia? Red blood cells in the body are manufactured at the bone marrow sites consequent to the influence and regulation of the erythropoietin hormone (EPO). The EPO hormone is primarily produced in the human kidneys. If therefore a person has kidney disease, it will mean that even the production of the EPO hormone is severely affected. The worse or rather the more chronic the kidney disease, the severe the decrease of red blood cells produced by a person's bone marrow. Consequently, in almost all cases of chronic kidney disease, the patient develops an anemia condition.
However, the degree of chronic kidney disease anemia is also influenced by other nutritional factors like inadequate intakes of minerals, proteins and vitamins useful in the production of red blood. Heavy blood loss consequent to menstrual periods, injuries or surgery may make the anemia more serious. To bring down the effect of chronic kidney disease anemia, proper dieting must be the rule of the thumb.
Research has established that patients suffering from chronic Kidney Disease have a high risk of developing an anemia condition. When a patient suffers from anemia after having a preexisting chronic kidney disease, we refer to that condition as kidney disease anemia.
The human blood incorporates two types of cells namely the white blood cells and the red blood cells. The white blood cells protect the body from infections while red blood cells primarily transport oxygen from your lungs to the muscle tissues throughout your body. Red blood cells are made up of a red protein called hemoglobin, which mixes with oxygen and is thus transmitted to muscle sites.
Now, anemia is the condition that results when a person has low numbers of the red blood cells in the blood. If the red blood cells are below normal, there will be a marked decrease in the available hemoglobin for oxygen transportation. To test the amount of red blood cells in the blood, medics conduct the hematocrit test, which basically represents a percentage of blood occupied by red blood cells.
If for instance you have 40% of each one ounce of your blood is occupied by the red blood cells, then you have a hematocrit of 40%. A normal hematocrit measure should be 36% to 51%. Men have a higher hematocrit level than normal women, given that women live with regular blood to the menstrual cycle. For one to be diagnosed of kidney disease anemia, he or she must display a hematocrit less than 42%. If it is less than 36%, the anemia is acute.
So what is the connection between kidney disease and anemia? Red blood cells in the body are manufactured at the bone marrow sites consequent to the influence and regulation of the erythropoietin hormone (EPO). The EPO hormone is primarily produced in the human kidneys. If therefore a person has kidney disease, it will mean that even the production of the EPO hormone is severely affected. The worse or rather the more chronic the kidney disease, the severe the decrease of red blood cells produced by a person's bone marrow. Consequently, in almost all cases of chronic kidney disease, the patient develops an anemia condition.
However, the degree of chronic kidney disease anemia is also influenced by other nutritional factors like inadequate intakes of minerals, proteins and vitamins useful in the production of red blood. Heavy blood loss consequent to menstrual periods, injuries or surgery may make the anemia more serious. To bring down the effect of chronic kidney disease anemia, proper dieting must be the rule of the thumb.
Kidney Disease Causes
Kidney Disease Causes
There are those types of risk factors that will always put you in the danger of contracting kidney disease. The kidney disease causes might be depicted by the appearance of symptoms later or early, although you must know the kind of disease you might be staring at as well as what you could do in the prevention of what it might affect in your life.
Some of the causes, such as age and family history are hardly easy to control, although there are those risk factors that can definitely be controlled. It is worth it learning the causes and those that can be controlled so that you can slow the disease down, or even prevent it. An example is the fact that you can control your own blood sugar and pressure and you would have helped your own kidneys to do their work normally for a longer time more than they would in case they lack a rather conscious attempt on diet aid.
After understanding these causes and risk factors of kidney disease, you might consider getting to your doctor so that you can together formulate a plan that could delay any cases of kidney failure as well as preventing it all the same. About forty percent with dialysis patients have diabetes already, which makes diabetes a very serious risk factor when it comes to kidney diseases. In type 2 case of diabetes, you have the number one cause of kidney failure, where it is responsible for more than a third of all novel dialysis cases.
Simply because you have diabetes, it hardly means you will attain kidney diseases. Readings of moderate blood sugar and pressure could aid in preventing kidney disorders. The symptoms will definitely be a way of alerting you in case your own body will be edging its way towards kidney diseases, and there is no point in waiting for all that time to act. Keeping a very tight rein on the levels of your own blood and sugar pressure there is likelihood you can lower the risks of kidney diseases.
In addition, high pressure of blood does put a lot of stress on your own blood vessels and in all parts of your body, as well as those vessels writhing your kidneys. It is also another prominent cause of serious cases of kidney failure. The good thing is that with weight control and exercise, as well as with the use of medications, you could slow or halt the kidney disease progression towards kidney failure. Remember to take the blood pressure drugs as prescribed and you will do a great deal of good to yourself.
There are those types of risk factors that will always put you in the danger of contracting kidney disease. The kidney disease causes might be depicted by the appearance of symptoms later or early, although you must know the kind of disease you might be staring at as well as what you could do in the prevention of what it might affect in your life.
Some of the causes, such as age and family history are hardly easy to control, although there are those risk factors that can definitely be controlled. It is worth it learning the causes and those that can be controlled so that you can slow the disease down, or even prevent it. An example is the fact that you can control your own blood sugar and pressure and you would have helped your own kidneys to do their work normally for a longer time more than they would in case they lack a rather conscious attempt on diet aid.
After understanding these causes and risk factors of kidney disease, you might consider getting to your doctor so that you can together formulate a plan that could delay any cases of kidney failure as well as preventing it all the same. About forty percent with dialysis patients have diabetes already, which makes diabetes a very serious risk factor when it comes to kidney diseases. In type 2 case of diabetes, you have the number one cause of kidney failure, where it is responsible for more than a third of all novel dialysis cases.
Simply because you have diabetes, it hardly means you will attain kidney diseases. Readings of moderate blood sugar and pressure could aid in preventing kidney disorders. The symptoms will definitely be a way of alerting you in case your own body will be edging its way towards kidney diseases, and there is no point in waiting for all that time to act. Keeping a very tight rein on the levels of your own blood and sugar pressure there is likelihood you can lower the risks of kidney diseases.
In addition, high pressure of blood does put a lot of stress on your own blood vessels and in all parts of your body, as well as those vessels writhing your kidneys. It is also another prominent cause of serious cases of kidney failure. The good thing is that with weight control and exercise, as well as with the use of medications, you could slow or halt the kidney disease progression towards kidney failure. Remember to take the blood pressure drugs as prescribed and you will do a great deal of good to yourself.
High Blood Pressure Kidney Disease
High Blood Pressure Kidney Disease
The kidneys have a very crucial role to play in keeping an individual's blood pressure in its required normal range, although blood pressure can affect the health status of the kidneys. High blood pressure, also known as hypertension, can adversely affect the kidneys and lead to chronic kidney disease. High blood pressure can be described as the force of blood against walls of the blood vessels. When there is an increase in the amount of fluids in the blood vessels, it will heighten high blood pressure. Stiff, narrow, and clogged blood vessels will also heighten high blood pressure.
High blood pressure kidney disease occurs when the heart is forced to work extra hard which as a result can damage the blood vessels in the whole body. When the blood vessels in the kidneys get damaged, their normal functioning i.e. excreting wastes and extra fluid from the blood, will cease. The excess fluid present in the blood vessels will automatically raise the blood pressure, and the cycle, although very dangerous, will go on.
High blood pressure kidney disease, otherwise known as end-stage renal disease, is a very serious condition that may force sufferers to get a kidney transplant, or dialysis - regular blood-cleansing routines. There are no symptoms associated with high blood pressure, and the only way to detect is when the doctor measures the blood pressure using a blood pressure cuff. The result will be expressed in two figures where the top figure represents the pressure of the blood when the heart is beating and the bottom figure will represent the pressure when the heart rest in between beats.
The signs and symptoms of high blood pressure kidney disease are equally not noticeable in the early stages. Someone can have the end-stage renal disease and not know it because they will not feel sick. However, by measuring the competence level of the kidneys to filter waste using the glomerular filtration rate (DFR), one can be able to detect the condition. The only way you can control high blood pressure kidney disease is through medications, and changing lifestyles to ensure that the blood pressure remains below 130/80. Everyone is susceptible to high blood pressure kidney disease, although diabetics are at a greater risk. As such, it is always advisable to ensure that proper diagnosis is made at the earliest available opportunity so that one can manage the condition and avoid future complications.
The kidneys have a very crucial role to play in keeping an individual's blood pressure in its required normal range, although blood pressure can affect the health status of the kidneys. High blood pressure, also known as hypertension, can adversely affect the kidneys and lead to chronic kidney disease. High blood pressure can be described as the force of blood against walls of the blood vessels. When there is an increase in the amount of fluids in the blood vessels, it will heighten high blood pressure. Stiff, narrow, and clogged blood vessels will also heighten high blood pressure.
High blood pressure kidney disease occurs when the heart is forced to work extra hard which as a result can damage the blood vessels in the whole body. When the blood vessels in the kidneys get damaged, their normal functioning i.e. excreting wastes and extra fluid from the blood, will cease. The excess fluid present in the blood vessels will automatically raise the blood pressure, and the cycle, although very dangerous, will go on.
High blood pressure kidney disease, otherwise known as end-stage renal disease, is a very serious condition that may force sufferers to get a kidney transplant, or dialysis - regular blood-cleansing routines. There are no symptoms associated with high blood pressure, and the only way to detect is when the doctor measures the blood pressure using a blood pressure cuff. The result will be expressed in two figures where the top figure represents the pressure of the blood when the heart is beating and the bottom figure will represent the pressure when the heart rest in between beats.
The signs and symptoms of high blood pressure kidney disease are equally not noticeable in the early stages. Someone can have the end-stage renal disease and not know it because they will not feel sick. However, by measuring the competence level of the kidneys to filter waste using the glomerular filtration rate (DFR), one can be able to detect the condition. The only way you can control high blood pressure kidney disease is through medications, and changing lifestyles to ensure that the blood pressure remains below 130/80. Everyone is susceptible to high blood pressure kidney disease, although diabetics are at a greater risk. As such, it is always advisable to ensure that proper diagnosis is made at the earliest available opportunity so that one can manage the condition and avoid future complications.
Monday, June 23, 2014
Gfr Kidney Disease
Gfr Kidney Disease
In GFR kidney disease, you are able to see the stages of the kidney disease advancing with each stage showing low or limited functions of the kidney. In a kidney there are Nephrones that give it its own functionality, where each of the kidneys might have around a million. The work of the kidney is so crucial in the body that you might take it for granted. They make sure they have retained your fluid balances as well as balancing some hormones in the body such as the filter and clean wastes, parathyroid hormone and playing an important role in the health of the bone through calcium processing, as they filter elements such as potassium.
In case the kidneys have failed to work properly as desired, the balance of fluids and waste processing will become disturbed greatly. This process of deterioration occurs in duration of many years for many people or in case the kidneys have been injured all of a sudden, they might stop working, in what is called acute renal failure. All individuals having a Glomerular filtration rate or GFR of 60mL/min/1.73 m2 in about 3 months, they are classified as people with chronic kidney disease, whether there is kidney damage or not.
The rationality that has been used in the inclusion of these groups of people is due to the fact that kidney function reduction at this level does represent a loss of half or even more of the normal adult kidney function level, which can also be associated with many other complications. All the people who have kidney damage are also classified as containing chronic kidney disease, whether they have a good or bad GFR level. If you have protein loss within the urine, it might be regarded as a good marker of worsening cardiovascular diseases or worsened renal function.
Kidney damage is said to be a marker of damage or pathological anomaly that depicts such anomalies as shown in urine and blood tests or in imaging studies. With a GFR moderate reduction of around 30-58, you might want to go for referral and screening care to make sure you don't suffer the ensuing consequences. Even more serious, GFR kidney disease reduction with a GFR reading of about 15 to 29 should tell the doctor that you should be prepared for a renal replacement type of therapy, while an established kidney failure with a GFR of 15 and below depicts the need for a permanent kind of renal replacement specialized therapy for your own good.
In GFR kidney disease, you are able to see the stages of the kidney disease advancing with each stage showing low or limited functions of the kidney. In a kidney there are Nephrones that give it its own functionality, where each of the kidneys might have around a million. The work of the kidney is so crucial in the body that you might take it for granted. They make sure they have retained your fluid balances as well as balancing some hormones in the body such as the filter and clean wastes, parathyroid hormone and playing an important role in the health of the bone through calcium processing, as they filter elements such as potassium.
In case the kidneys have failed to work properly as desired, the balance of fluids and waste processing will become disturbed greatly. This process of deterioration occurs in duration of many years for many people or in case the kidneys have been injured all of a sudden, they might stop working, in what is called acute renal failure. All individuals having a Glomerular filtration rate or GFR of 60mL/min/1.73 m2 in about 3 months, they are classified as people with chronic kidney disease, whether there is kidney damage or not.
The rationality that has been used in the inclusion of these groups of people is due to the fact that kidney function reduction at this level does represent a loss of half or even more of the normal adult kidney function level, which can also be associated with many other complications. All the people who have kidney damage are also classified as containing chronic kidney disease, whether they have a good or bad GFR level. If you have protein loss within the urine, it might be regarded as a good marker of worsening cardiovascular diseases or worsened renal function.
Kidney damage is said to be a marker of damage or pathological anomaly that depicts such anomalies as shown in urine and blood tests or in imaging studies. With a GFR moderate reduction of around 30-58, you might want to go for referral and screening care to make sure you don't suffer the ensuing consequences. Even more serious, GFR kidney disease reduction with a GFR reading of about 15 to 29 should tell the doctor that you should be prepared for a renal replacement type of therapy, while an established kidney failure with a GFR of 15 and below depicts the need for a permanent kind of renal replacement specialized therapy for your own good.
Chronic Kidney Disease Stages
Chronic Kidney Disease Stages
Chronic kidney diseases are also known as chronic renal diseases. This disease is caused by the failure of the kidney functions over the years or months. There are no specific symptoms of this disease but patients at first generally feel uncomfortable and they suffer from reduced appetite. Chronic kidney diseases are generally identified while checking other kidney related problems such as diabetes or high blood pressure. Chronic kidney disorder is identified by blood test done for creatinine. Creatinine can be normal in the initial stages of the disease but it can be identified by the urinalysis. During urinalysis results can show that whether kidney is performing the functions normally or not. There is no specific treatment of this disease and it can be cured by completely transplanting kidney in the final stages. It's a kind of dialysis. Some of the stages which are involved in this chronic kidney disease are described below:
1. Stage 1 - at this stage the normal functions are slightly diminished and the glomerular filtration rate is more than 90 ml/minute. At this stage chronic kidney disease can be identified by the urine test.
2. Stage 2 - the glomerular filtration rates decreases rapidly and comes to 60 to 89 ml/minute. Kidney damage is also starts at a greater rate. Functions start to diminish rapidly. Kidney allows proteins and other useful substances to flow out with urine.
3. Stage 3 - the reduction in the glomerular filtration rates increases and it reduces to 30 to 59 ml/minute. The kidney damage is about 30% and the kidney functions poorly. This stage is considered by the doctors as the stage before the maximum damage or complete failure.
4. Stage 4 - at this stage kidney functions very badly and the glomerular filtration rates are reduced considerably to 15 to 29 ml/minute. Kidney at this stage losses the power to filter urine properly. At this stage doctors generally prepares for renal replacement process as this is the stage where replacement is the only option.
5. Stage 5 - at this stage kidney fails permanently and the glomerular filtration rates get reduced to less than 15 ml/minute. Kidney stops functioning and so the only option to cure this disease at this stage is permanent replacement of kidneys.
The main cause of chronic kidney disease is hypertension and diabetes nephropathy. These two reasons of chronic kidney disease, account for more than 79% of total adult kidney cases.
Chronic kidney diseases are also known as chronic renal diseases. This disease is caused by the failure of the kidney functions over the years or months. There are no specific symptoms of this disease but patients at first generally feel uncomfortable and they suffer from reduced appetite. Chronic kidney diseases are generally identified while checking other kidney related problems such as diabetes or high blood pressure. Chronic kidney disorder is identified by blood test done for creatinine. Creatinine can be normal in the initial stages of the disease but it can be identified by the urinalysis. During urinalysis results can show that whether kidney is performing the functions normally or not. There is no specific treatment of this disease and it can be cured by completely transplanting kidney in the final stages. It's a kind of dialysis. Some of the stages which are involved in this chronic kidney disease are described below:
1. Stage 1 - at this stage the normal functions are slightly diminished and the glomerular filtration rate is more than 90 ml/minute. At this stage chronic kidney disease can be identified by the urine test.
2. Stage 2 - the glomerular filtration rates decreases rapidly and comes to 60 to 89 ml/minute. Kidney damage is also starts at a greater rate. Functions start to diminish rapidly. Kidney allows proteins and other useful substances to flow out with urine.
3. Stage 3 - the reduction in the glomerular filtration rates increases and it reduces to 30 to 59 ml/minute. The kidney damage is about 30% and the kidney functions poorly. This stage is considered by the doctors as the stage before the maximum damage or complete failure.
4. Stage 4 - at this stage kidney functions very badly and the glomerular filtration rates are reduced considerably to 15 to 29 ml/minute. Kidney at this stage losses the power to filter urine properly. At this stage doctors generally prepares for renal replacement process as this is the stage where replacement is the only option.
5. Stage 5 - at this stage kidney fails permanently and the glomerular filtration rates get reduced to less than 15 ml/minute. Kidney stops functioning and so the only option to cure this disease at this stage is permanent replacement of kidneys.
The main cause of chronic kidney disease is hypertension and diabetes nephropathy. These two reasons of chronic kidney disease, account for more than 79% of total adult kidney cases.
Chronic Kidney Disease Diet
Chronic Kidney Disease Diet
A person with chronic kidney disease should always eat a diet that has low-protein content. Too much protein makes the kidney problem to get worse. The diet should also contain low amounts of potassium and sodium. For some patients, it is also important for fluid restrictions to be imposed.
Some people suffer from both diabetes and chronic kidney disease. In this case, a diet that is low on carbohydrates is recommended. A special diet for kidney disease patients ensures that minimal stress is put on the kidney as far as its functioning is concerned. Too much protein increases kidney activity and this makes the disease progress very quickly.
Sodium can sometimes be restricted in order to make it easy for blood pressure to b e controlled easily without putting the kidney under excessive stress. If potassium levels in the blood are high, the doctor will advise the patient to reduce the intake of this element. Too much potassium will lead to dangerous heartbeat rhythms.
In every chronic kidney disease diet where controlled amounts are required, the patient's consumption patterns should be determined by the levels of each component in the patient's blood. This means that the amount of sodium, protein, potassium and urea should be ascertained. The protein measure encompasses body levels of both albumin and protein. Urea is a bodily waste product most of which is released through urine.
You should restrict the amount of fluid in your body only when so much of it has accumulated in the system. Phosphorus and calcium should also be closely monitored. A chronic kidney disease diet that has too much should be avoided since phosphorous levels tend to go up among people with kidney disease.
Complex carbohydrates form the best diets for these people. You need to eat more carbohydrates as opposed to fats. Calories that comes from fats should be sourced from polyunsaturated and monounsaturated fats. Diabetic people should seek very closely monitored assistance from their health providers in order for them to be able to regulate their carbohydrate needs properly. The carbohydrates should be range between low and moderate-levels and the patient should always stick to healthy fats.
Some side effects of choosing these diets have to do largely with deficiencies. A person who does not consume proteins will miss very essential amino acids. A low-protein diet is also low in vitamins thiamin, riboflavin and niacin. These elements are very essential to the body.
A person with chronic kidney disease should always eat a diet that has low-protein content. Too much protein makes the kidney problem to get worse. The diet should also contain low amounts of potassium and sodium. For some patients, it is also important for fluid restrictions to be imposed.
Some people suffer from both diabetes and chronic kidney disease. In this case, a diet that is low on carbohydrates is recommended. A special diet for kidney disease patients ensures that minimal stress is put on the kidney as far as its functioning is concerned. Too much protein increases kidney activity and this makes the disease progress very quickly.
Sodium can sometimes be restricted in order to make it easy for blood pressure to b e controlled easily without putting the kidney under excessive stress. If potassium levels in the blood are high, the doctor will advise the patient to reduce the intake of this element. Too much potassium will lead to dangerous heartbeat rhythms.
In every chronic kidney disease diet where controlled amounts are required, the patient's consumption patterns should be determined by the levels of each component in the patient's blood. This means that the amount of sodium, protein, potassium and urea should be ascertained. The protein measure encompasses body levels of both albumin and protein. Urea is a bodily waste product most of which is released through urine.
You should restrict the amount of fluid in your body only when so much of it has accumulated in the system. Phosphorus and calcium should also be closely monitored. A chronic kidney disease diet that has too much should be avoided since phosphorous levels tend to go up among people with kidney disease.
Complex carbohydrates form the best diets for these people. You need to eat more carbohydrates as opposed to fats. Calories that comes from fats should be sourced from polyunsaturated and monounsaturated fats. Diabetic people should seek very closely monitored assistance from their health providers in order for them to be able to regulate their carbohydrate needs properly. The carbohydrates should be range between low and moderate-levels and the patient should always stick to healthy fats.
Some side effects of choosing these diets have to do largely with deficiencies. A person who does not consume proteins will miss very essential amino acids. A low-protein diet is also low in vitamins thiamin, riboflavin and niacin. These elements are very essential to the body.
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