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Test Your Kidneys to Keep Kidney Disease at Bay

by Julia Samuel on Mar 12 2015 11:33 AM

Test Your Kidneys to Keep Kidney Disease at Bay
One of the diseases that are becoming common other than heart disease and diabetes is chronic kidney disease (CKD). High incidence of diabetes and obesity, pill popping and regular use of painkillers, antibiotics are the few reasons for chronic kidney disease.
Lack of specialists and also awareness about the disease among general practitioners make the situation worse. The World Kidney Day observed on 12 March carries the theme, ‘Kidney for All’.

"High incidence of metabolic diseases, over-the-counter pills, dependence on traditional medicine, and high rate of infection due to being a tropical country makes for a toxic combination for the kidneys. However, there are several ways to reduce the risk, some as simple as less use of antibiotics," said Dr. Monali Sahu, secretary, Central India Nephrology Society.

Kidney diseases usually do not have any symptoms, and patients visit the doctor only when the disease becomes chronic. Since most patients consult doctors at a very late stage, it is difficult to halt or revert the progress of disease.

Rural population, minorities and the poor were mostly affected with kidney ailments. "Treatment of CKD is extremely expensive and lack of finances imply that patients forgo treatment and dialysis," said Dr. Sahu.

Nephrologist Dr. Prakash Khetan added that there are around 12,000 specialists across the country and they are concentrated in a few cities. "This adds traveling costs to the cost of treatment. The understanding of kidney diseases is also not too good among general practitioners. The investigations are expensive and the response to treatment varies widely from patient to patient. All these factors make management of patients difficult," he said.

The only way to stay safe is prevention and regular monitoring of one’s kidney functions.

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Source-Medindia


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