Nephrology

Chronic Kidney Disease

A progressive loss of kidney function over time, often due to diabetes or hypertension, requiring lifelong management and monitoring.

Acute Kidney Injury

Sudden decline in kidney function, often reversible, caused by infection, medication, or trauma, needing prompt medical attention and treatment.

Diabetic Nephropathy

Kidney damage caused by long-term uncontrolled diabetes, leading to protein leakage in urine and eventual decline in kidney function.

Glomerulonephritis

Inflammation of the kidney’s filtering units (glomeruli), affecting waste removal and often causing swelling, high blood pressure, and blood in urine.

Nephrotic Syndrome

A group of symptoms including heavy protein loss in urine, swelling, and high cholesterol, often caused by glomerular disease.

Hematuria

Presence of blood in urine, often a symptom of kidney stones, infection, or underlying kidney disease needing further evaluation.

Kidney Stones

Hard mineral deposits formed in the kidneys, causing severe pain, bleeding, infection, nausea, vomiting, and possible blockage of normal urine flow and function.

Lupus Nephritis

Kidney inflammation caused by systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), affecting filtration and potentially leading to kidney failure if untreated.

Renal Cell Carcinoma

The most common type of kidney cancer, often detected late, requiring timely surgery or advanced targeted therapy for effective treatment.

Polycystic Kidney Disease

A genetic disorder causing fluid-filled cysts in kidneys, leading to enlarged kidneys, pain, and eventual kidney failure.

Dialysis-Related Complications

Issues like infections, electrolyte imbalances, or low blood pressure in patients undergoing dialysis for kidney failure.

Hypertension-Related Kidney Disease

High blood pressure damages kidney blood vessels over time, reducing filtration ability and increasing risk of kidney failure.