How long can polycystic kidney uremia live

Update Date: Source: Network

summary

As a result of long-term bad problems, some time ago, I always had low back pain for no reason and felt uncomfortable. The hospital said it was polycystic kidney uremia. Now let me talk about how long polycystic kidney uremia can live.

How long can polycystic kidney uremia live

First: many people know that polycystic kidney disease and uremia belong to one kind of kidney disease. However, polycystic kidney disease is a common genetic disease. Most patients are about 30 years old. Early treatment of this disease will be very helpful. If it is serious, it may cause uremia, so we must pay attention to it

Second, if polycystic kidney is not well controlled or effective treatment is not taken, it can develop into renal insufficiency, leading to renal failure uremia. Uremia is not an independent disease name, but a clinical syndrome of late renal disease. It is the middle and late stage of progressive renal failure. According to the relevant detection, examination and symptom performance, as well as the different degrees of elevation of serum creatinine, urea nitrogen and other related indicators, it can be divided into renal insufficiency compensation stage, azotemia stage and uremia stage.

Third: when polycystic kidney develops into uremia, it will reach a very terrible stage, which is life-threatening. Polycystic kidney disease can be said to be clear than uremia, so if it is not paid attention to, not treated, it will lead to uremia, polycystic kidney early, small cysts on the kidney does not squeeze phenomenon, so the patient has no obvious discomfort. Severe patients may have cysts occupying the whole kidney, and then we must pay attention to the gradual atrophy of the kidney, renal failure.

matters needing attention

Chronic renal failure (CRF) is a clinical syndrome composed of a series of symptoms and metabolic disorders caused by various renal diseases leading to progressive and irreversible decline of renal function until the loss of function. The end stage of chronic renal failure is often called uremia.