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Additional Information
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Your two kidneys are vital organs that perform many functions
to keep your blood clean and chemically balanced. Understanding
how your kidneys work can help you to keep them healthy.
What do my kidneys do?
Your kidneys are bean-shaped organs, each about the size
of your fist. They are located near the middle of your back,
just below the rib cage. The kidneys are sophisticated reprocessing
machines. Every day, your kidneys process about 200 quarts
of blood to sift out about 2 quarts of waste products and
extra water. The waste and extra water become urine, which
flows to your bladder through tubes called ureters. Your
bladder stores urine until you go to the bathroom.
The wastes in your blood come from the normal breakdown
of active tissues and from the food you eat. Your body uses
the food for energy and self-repair. After your body has
taken what it needs from the food, waste is sent to the blood.
If your kidneys did not remove these wastes, the wastes would
build up in the blood and damage your body.
The actual filtering occurs in tiny units inside your kidneys
called nephrons. Every kidney has about a million nephrons.
In the nephron, a glomerulus—which is a tiny blood
vessel, or capillary—intertwines with a tiny urine-collecting
tube called a tubule. A complicated chemical exchange takes
place, as waste materials and water leave your blood and
enter your urinary system.
At first, the tubules receive a combination of waste materials
and chemicals that your body can still use. Your kidneys
measure out chemicals like sodium, phosphorus, and potassium
and release them back to the blood to return to the body.
In this way, your kidneys regulate the body’s level
of these substances. The right balance is necessary for life,
but excess levels can be harmful.
In addition to removing wastes, your kidneys release three
important hormones:
- erythropoietin (eh-RITH-ro-POY-eh-tin), or EPO, which
stimulates the bone marrow to make red blood cells
- renin (REE-nin), which regulates blood pressure
- calcitriol (kal-suh-TRY-ul), the active form of vitamin
D, which helps maintain calcium for bones and for normal
chemical balance in the body
What is renal function?
Your health care team may talk about the work your kidneys
do as renal function. If you have two healthy kidneys, you
have 100 percent of your renal function. This is more renal
function than you really need. Some people are born with
only one kidney, and these people are able to lead normal,
healthy lives. Many people donate a kidney for transplantation
to a family member or friend. Small declines in renal function
may not cause a problem.
But many people with reduced renal function have a kidney
disease that will get worse. You will have serious health
problems if you have less than 25 percent of your renal function.
If your renal function drops below 10 to 15 percent, you
cannot live long without some form of renal replacement therapy—either
dialysis or transplantation.
Why do kidneys fail?
Most kidney diseases attack the nephrons, causing them to
lose their filtering capacity. Damage to the nephrons may
happen quickly, often as the result of injury or poisoning.
But most kidney diseases destroy the nephrons slowly and
silently. Only after years or even decades will the damage
become apparent. Most kidney diseases attack both kidneys
simultaneously.
The two most common causes of kidney disease are diabetes
and high blood pressure. If your family has a history of
any kind of kidney problems, you may be at risk for kidney
disease.
Diabetic Nephropathy
Diabetes is a disease that keeps the body from using glucose
(sugar) as it should. If glucose stays in your blood instead
of breaking down, it can act like a poison. Damage to the
nephrons from unused glucose in the blood is called diabetic
nephropathy. If you keep your blood glucose levels down,
you can delay or prevent diabetic nephropathy.
High Blood Pressure
High blood pressure can damage the small blood vessels in
your kidneys. The damaged vessels cannot filter wastes from
your blood as they are supposed to.
Your doctor may prescribe blood pressure medication. Blood
pressure medicines called angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE)
inhibitors and angiotensin receptor blockers (ARBs) have
been found to protect the kidneys even more than other medicines
that lower blood pressure to similar levels. The National
Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI), one of the National
Institutes of Health, recommends that people with diabetes
or reduced kidney function should keep their blood pressure
below 130/80 mm Hg.
Glomerular Diseases
Several different types of kidney disease are grouped together
under this category, including autoimmune diseases, infection-related
diseases, and sclerotic diseases. As the name indicates,
glomerular diseases attack the tiny blood vessels (glomeruli)
within the kidney. The most common primary glomerular diseases
include membranous nephropathy, IgA nephropathy, and focal
segmental glomerulosclerosis. Protein, blood, or both in
the urine are often the first signs of these diseases. They
can slowly destroy kidney function. Blood pressure control
is important with any kidney disease. Treatments for glomerular
diseases may include immunosuppressive drugs or steroids
to reduce inflammation and proteinuria, depending on the
specific disease.
Inherited and Congenital Kidney Diseases
Some kidney diseases result from hereditary factors. Polycystic
kidney disease (PKD), for example, is a genetic disorder
in which many cysts grow in the kidneys. PKD cysts can slowly
replace much of the mass of the kidneys, reducing kidney
function and leading to kidney failure.
Some kidney problems may show up when a child is still developing
in the womb. Examples include autosomal recessive PKD, a
rare form of PKD, and other developmental problems that interfere
with the normal formation of the nephrons. The signs of kidney
disease in children vary. A child may grow unusually slowly,
may vomit often, or may have back or side pain. Some kidney
diseases may be “silent” for months or even
years.
If your child has a kidney disease, your child’s doctor
should find it during a regular checkup. Be sure your child
sees a doctor regularly. The first sign of a kidney problem
may be high blood pressure, a low number of red blood cells
(anemia), or blood or protein in the child’s urine.
If the doctor finds any of these problems, further tests
may be necessary, including additional blood and urine tests
or radiology studies. In some cases, the doctor may need
to perform a biopsy—removing a tiny piece of the kidney
to examine under a microscope.
Some hereditary kidney diseases may not be detected until
adulthood. The most common form of PKD was once called "adult
PKD" because the symptoms of high blood pressure and renal
failure usually do not occur until patients are in their
twenties or thirties. But with advances in diagnostic imaging
technology, doctors have found cysts in children and adolescents
before any symptoms appear.
Other Causes of Kidney Disease
Poisons and trauma, for example a direct and forceful blow
to your kidneys, can lead to kidney disease.
Some over-the-counter medicines can be poisonous to your
kidneys if taken regularly over a long period of time. Products
that combine aspirin, acetaminophen, and other medicines
such as ibuprofen have been found to be the most dangerous
to the kidneys. If you take painkillers regularly, check
with your doctor to make sure you are not putting your kidneys
at risk.
How do kidneys fail?
Many factors that influence the speed of kidney failure
are not completely understood. Researchers are still studying
how protein in the diet and cholesterol levels in the blood
affect kidney function.
Acute Renal Failure
Some kidney problems happen quickly, like an accident that
injures the kidneys. Losing a lot of blood can cause sudden
kidney failure. Some drugs or poisons can make your kidneys
stop working. These sudden drops in kidney function are called
acute renal failure (ARF).
ARF may lead to permanent loss of kidney function. But if
your kidneys are not seriously damaged, acute renal failure
may be reversed.
Chronic Kidney Disease
Most kidney problems, however, happen slowly. You may have “silent” kidney
disease for years. Gradual loss of kidney function is called
chronic kidney disease (CKD) or chronic renal insufficiency.
People with CKD may go on to permanent kidney failure. They
also have a high risk of dying from a stroke or heart attack.
End-Stage Renal Disease
Total or nearly total and permanent kidney failure is called
end-stage renal disease (ESRD). People with ESRD must undergo
dialysis or transplantation to stay alive.
What are the signs of kidney disease?
People in the early stages of kidney disease usually do
not feel sick at all.
If your kidney disease gets worse, you may need to urinate
more often or less often. You may feel tired or itchy. You
may lose your appetite or experience nausea and vomiting.
Your hands or feet may swell or feel numb. You may get drowsy
or have trouble concentrating. Your skin may darken. You
may have muscle cramps.
Points to Remember
- Your kidneys are vital organs that keep your blood clean
and chemically balanced.
- The progression of kidney disease can be slowed, but
it cannot always be reversed.
- End-stage renal disease (ESRD) is the total loss of kidney
function.
- Dialysis and transplantation can extend the lives of
people with ESRD.
- Diabetes and high blood pressure are the two leading
causes of kidney failure.
- You should see a nephrologist regularly if you have renal
disease.
- Chronic kidney disease (CKD) increases the risk of heart
attacks and strokes.
- If you are in the early stages of renal disease, you
may be able to save your remaining renal function for many
years by
- controlling your blood glucose
- controlling your blood pressure
- following a low-protein diet
- maintaining healthy levels of cholesterol in your
blood
- taking an ACE inhibitor or an ARB
- quitting smoking
To read the rest of this article and related material from
The National Kidney and Urologic Diseases Information Clearinghouse
(NKUDIC), please click here: http://kidney.niddk.nih.gov/kudiseases/pubs/yourkidneys/index.htm
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