Kidneys
are remarkable organs. Inside them are millions of tiny blood vessels that act as filters. Their job is to
remove waste products from the blood.
Sometimes
this filtering system breaks down. Diabetes can damage the kidneys and cause
them to fail. Failing kidneys lose
their ability to filter out waste products, resulting in kidney disease.
How Does Diabetes
Cause Kidney Disease?
When
our bodies digest the protein we eat, the process creates waste products. In
the kidneys, millions of tiny blood vessels (capillaries) with even tinier
holes in them act as filters. As blood flows through the blood vessels, small
molecules such as waste products squeeze through the holes. These waste
products become part of the urine. Useful substances, such as protein and red blood cells, are too big to pass
through the holes in the filter and stay in the blood.
Diabetes
can damage this system. High levels of blood sugar make the kidneys filter too much blood.
All this extra work is hard on the filters. After many years, they start to
leak and useful protein is lost in the urine. Having small amounts of protein
in the urine is called microalbuminuria.
When
kidney disease is diagnosed early, during microalbuminuria, several treatments
may keep kidney disease from getting worse. Having larger amounts of protein in
the urine is called macroalbuminuria. When kidney disease is caught later
during macroalbuminuria, end-stage renal disease,
or ESRD, usually follows.
In
time, the stress of overwork causes the kidneys to lose their filtering
ability. Waste products then start to build up in the blood. Finally, the
kidneys fail. This failure, ESRD, is very serious. A person with ESRD needs to
have a kidney transplant or to have the blood filtered by machine (dialysis).
Who Gets Kidney
Disease?
Not
everyone with diabetes develops kidney disease. Factors that can influence
kidney disease development include genetics, blood sugar control, and blood pressure.
The
better a person keeps diabetes and blood pressure under control, the lower the
chance of getting kidney disease.
What are the Symptoms?
The
kidneys work hard to make up for the failing capillaries so kidney disease
produces no symptoms until almost all function is gone. Also, the symptoms of
kidney disease are not specific. The first symptom of kidney disease is often
fluid buildup. Other symptoms of kidney disease include loss of sleep, poor
appetite, upset stomach, weakness, and difficulty concentrating.
It is
vital to see a doctor regularly. The doctor can check blood pressure, urine
(for protein), blood (for waste products), and organs for other complications of diabetes.
How Can I Prevent It?
Diabetic
kidney disease can be prevented by keeping blood sugar in your target range.
Research has shown that tight blood sugar control reduces the risk of
microalbuminuria by one third. In people who already had microalbuminuria, the
risk of progressing to macroalbuminuria was cut in half. Other studies have suggested
that tight control can reverse microalbuminuria.
Treatments for Kidney
Disease
Self-care
Important
treatments for kidney disease are tight control of blood glucose and blood pressure. Blood pressure has a
dramatic effect on the rate at which the disease progresses. Even a mild rise
in blood pressure can quickly make kidney disease worsen. Four ways to lower
your blood pressure are losing weight, eating less salt, avoiding alcohol and
tobacco, and getting regular exercise.
Drugs
When
these methods fail, certain medicines may be able to lower blood pressure.
There are several kinds of blood pressure drugs, however, not all are equally
good for people with diabetes. Some raise blood sugar levels or mask some of
the symptoms of low blood sugar. Doctors usually prefer people with diabetes to
take blood pressure drugs called ACE inhibitors.
ACE
inhibitors are recommended for most people with diabetes, high blood pressure
and kidney disease. Recent studies suggest that ACE inhibitors, which include
captopril and enalapril, slow kidney disease in addition to lowering blood
pressure. In fact, these drugs are helpful even in people who do not have high
blood pressure.
Diet
Another
treatment some doctors use with macroalbuminuria is a low-protein diet. Protein
seems to increase how hard the kidneys must work. A low-protein diet can
decrease protein loss in the urine and increase protein levels in the blood.
Never start a low-protein diet without talking to your health care team.
Kidney Failure
Once
kidneys fail, dialysis is necessary. The person must choose whether to continue
with dialysis or to get a kidney transplant. This choice should be made as a
team effort. The team should include the doctor and diabetes educator, a nephrologist (kidney doctor), a kidney transplant
surgeon, a social worker, and a psychologist.
No comments:
Post a Comment