Causes of kidney disease are diabetes and high blood pressure

  • Apr 12, 2009
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If your family has a history of any kind of kidney problems, you may be at risk for kidney disease.


1.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.



2.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), a part 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.

3.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 slowly can 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.

4.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 slowly can replace much of the mass of the kidneys, reducing kidney function and leading to kidney failure.

Harinder Johal

Author is Writer/ Editor / Webmaster of Various topics at http://www.ReadAboutHealth.Com Instantly Download Ebooks on various Health Topics at http://www.ebooks.ReadAboutHealth.Com

http://www.kidney-diseases.com

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