The Basics Of Chronic Kidney Disease

Medical Risk Factors For Chronic Kidney Disease

NewLifeOutlook

Two of the most significant medical risk factors of chronic kidney disease include diabetes and high blood pressure. Diabetes is a disease where a patient's body cannot appropriately manage its blood sugar levels. Individuals affected by diabetes often have high blood sugar, which causes damage to the small blood vessels inside of their kidneys. The kidneys are not able to properly filter the blood without these healthy vessels, causing a decrease in function. On the other hand, long-term hypertension causes an affected individual's renal arteries to become hardened, narrowed, or weakened. This malfunction results in reduced blood delivery to the tissues of the kidneys, reducing their function. Other less common medical risk factors for chronic kidney disease include glomerulonephritis or irritation of the small filters in the kidneys, interstitial nephritis (inflammation of the kidney’s tubules and structures), injury to the kidney, vesicoureteral reflux (where urine backs up in the kidneys), lupus, IgA nephropathy, and polycystic kidney disease.

Read more about the risk factors linked to chronic kidney disease now.

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