No one plans to get sick, let alone get diabetes and have their kidney stop working. The causes for diabetes are many and oftentimes hereditary in nature. In my case, diabetes and kidney disease ran on both sides of my family and while I knew the risks and did everything to live well, I contracted diabetes despite my best efforts.
Eventually, my diabetes got worse and my kidneys began to fail. Last February, I started peritoneal dialysis at home and I'm responding well. But dialysis is not a long term solution, only a kidney transplant can work in the long run.
What is it and how to treat it...
Chronic kidney disease, also called chronic kidney failure, involves a gradual loss of kidney function. Your kidneys filter wastes and excess fluids from your blood, which are then removed in your urine. Advanced chronic kidney disease can cause dangerous levels of fluid, electrolytes and wastes to build up in your body.
Treatment for chronic kidney disease focuses on slowing the progression of kidney damage, usually by controlling the cause. But, even controlling the cause might not keep kidney damage from progressing. Chronic kidney disease can progress to end-stage kidney failure, which is fatal without artificial filtering (dialysis) or a kidney transplant.
Chronic kidney disease can affect almost every part of your body. Potential complications include:
If your kidneys can't keep up with waste and fluid clearance on their own and you develop complete or near-complete kidney failure, you have end-stage kidney disease. At that point, you need dialysis or a kidney transplant.
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