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Featured Article:
Dressed in Black: African Americans and End of Life Care

With the advent of certain pain medicines like morphine, or medical equipment like respirators or ventilators, or procedures like kidney dialysis, medical physicians and other health care professionals have the ability to prolong life or prolong death. Persons with certain debilitating and/or terminal diseases or injuries, especially, to the central nervous system, may be able to live longer today. Read Full Story | Print Version

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 NBCC : Black Health & Wellness

Kidney Disease
What You Need to Know

Kidney Disease Basics

Kidney Disease: What You Need to KnowYou have two kidneys. Their main job is to filter extra water and wastes out of your blood and produce urine. Kidney disease is a condition in which the kidney's ability to filter is decreased. Waste then builds up in the blood, harming the body.

Most kidney disease is chronic; it can be treated but does not go away. Usually the goal of treatment is to prevent kidney disease from getting worse. If found early, kidney disease can be effectively treated to keep your kidneys healthier longer. If not treated, kidney disease can lead to kidney failure. People with kidney failure need to go on dialysis or a get a kidney transplant to continue living.

Comment on Featured Articles in the forum

Early kidney disease has no symptoms, so testing is the only way to know if you have it. Find out at your next medical visit if you should be tested.

Risk Factors for Kidney Disease

You are at risk for kidney disease if you have:

  • Diabetes; or
  • High blood pressure; or
  • Cardiovascular (heart) disease; or
  • A mother, father, sister, or brother with kidney disease.

Diabetes and high blood pressure are the two main risk factors for kidney disease, and the leading causes of kidney failure. Both diabetes and high blood pressure can damage your kidneys over time, without you knowing it. If you have any of these risk factors, you should get tested for kidney disease.

Kidney Disease/Failure and the African American Community

African Americans are disproportionately affected by kidney failure.1 In large part, this is due to higher rates of diabetes and high blood pressure (hypertension)-the two leading causes of kidney failure-among African Americans. African Americans make up about 12 percent of the U.S. population but account for about 32 percent of the people with kidney failure.1

Testing for Kidney Disease

Blood and urine tests are used to find kidney disease.

  • The blood test helps your doctor measure your GFR (glomerular filtration rate), which tells you how well your kidneys are working. A GFR of 60 or higher is in the normal range. A GFR lower than 60 may mean kidney disease.
  • The urine test measures the amount of protein in your urine. Protein can leak into the urine when the kidneys are not working well.

Because early kidney disease has no symptoms, the only way to know if you have it is to get tested. The sooner kidney disease is found, the sooner you can take steps to help prevent kidney failure.

Make sure you know:

  • your GFR,
  • how much protein is in your urine, and
  • your blood pressure.

 

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