What is chronic kidney disease (CKD)?
Chronic kidney disease includes conditions that damage your kidneys and
decrease their ability to keep you healthy by doing the jobs listed. If kidney
disease gets worse, wastes can build to high levels in your blood and make you
feel sick. You may develop complications like high blood pressure, anemia (low
blood count), weak bones, poor nutritional health and nerve damage. Also, kidney
disease increases your risk of having heart and blood vessel disease. These
problems may happen slowly over a long period of time. Chronic kidney disease
may be caused by diabetes, high blood pressure and other disorders. Early
detection and treatment can often keep chronic kidney disease from getting
worse. When kidney disease progresses, it may eventually lead to kidney failure,
which requires dialysis or a kidney transplant to maintain life.
1. Changes in Urination
Because your kidneys are tasked with making urine, and thereby eliminating
waste, any changes in the frequency, color, or appearance of urine should be
taken seriously. Some common types of changes include:
· Urinating more frequently during the night or in greater amounts
· Urinating less often or in smaller amounts
· Having foamy or bubbly urine or blood in your urine
· Difficulty urinating
2. Swelling
If your kidneys are unable to remove extra fluid from your body, you will
likely experience swelling in your legs, ankles, feet, face, or hands.
3. Skin Rash / Itching
If your kidneys are unable to remove waste from the bloodstream, the buildup
can cause rashes and severe itching.
4. Leg, Back or Side Pain
Kidney problems can lead to pain in the back, side or even in the leg. Kidney
cysts (large, fluid-filled sacs) resulting from polycystic kidney disease that
form on kidneys and occasionally on the liver can also cause back and leg
pain.
5. Metallic Taste in Mouth/Ammonia Breath
When waste builds up in the bloodstream, it can cause bad breath, a metallic
taste in the mouth, and affect how food tastes. You may also have a change in
appetite that results in weight loss.
6. Nausea and Vomiting
Waste buildup in the blood can also cause nausea and vomiting.
7. Feeling Cold
Healthy kidneys make the hormone known as erythropoietin, which prompts the
body to make oxygen-carrying red blood cells. Kidney disease can interrupt the
healthy production of this hormone and cause a decrease in red blood cells, a
condition known as anemia. Anemia and kidney disease can result in a variety of
symptoms, including constantly feeling cold and shortness of breath.
8. Shortness of Breath
Kidney disease can cause extra fluid to build up in the lungs, leading to
shortness of breath. Anemia, a common side-effect of kidney disease which
starves your body of oxygen, can also cause you to feel winded or short of
breath.
9. Dizziness and Trouble Concentrating
When you suffer from anemia related to kidney failure, both your body and
your brain will be lacking the proper amount of oxygen. The result can be
dizziness, trouble with concentration, and memory-related issues.
10. Fatigue
When kidneys fail, and side effects like anemia set in, you may experience
tired muscles, weakness, and overall fatigue.
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