According to Lawson, some kidney diseases are treatable, but an early diagnosis is the only thing that will reduce complications. "A kidney disease at its initial stage is treatable, [but] if any kidney disease reaches its advanced stage, it can become a life-threatening situation for you," she warns.
The Mayo Clinic says that chronic kidney disease "can affect almost every part of your body," resulting in serious long-term consequences. This includes heart disease, pregnancy complications, decreased immune response, and anemia. You may also develop irreversible damage to your kidneys once the disease advances far enough without treatment, requiring you to undergo either dialysis or a kidney transplant to survive.
"If your kidneys are not working properly, all the waste materials will start accumulating in your blood while making you greatly sick. The long-term consequences associated with this are high blood pressure, weaker bones, shortness of breath, low blood count, nerve damage, and heart problems," Lawson says. "If you have observed early signs of kidney disease, you should get its treatment without any delay."
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