Fact Or Myth Less Drinking Causes Kidney Disorders ..?

When we Lack of drinking can impair kidney function that causes dehydration. This condition can occur as a result of the intake is less, for example, children in long-term shortage of drinking, drought conditions, or the child does not want to eat or drink. Conversely, it could be because not enough balanced intake. An example is when a child with diarrhea, high fever, or severe pain. If sustained or repeated, kidney function can return to normal could initially settled down. Decreased renal function due to dehydration rarely sustained when the cause has been resolved.

Not only have kidney disease, swollen legs, swollen eyelids, until the whole body was swollen is one of the symptoms of kidney disease. Why so? Swelling is a marker for the presence of protein deficiency in the blood. In fact, this protein is useful to retain fluid in the blood vessels. Due to lack of protein, water will get into the network causing swelling. This is due to the function "filter" in the kidney glomeruli disrupted (called renal leak layman's terms) to the protein lost through the urine.

What difference vs. kidney failure kidney disease
Renal kidney failure means failing to function. Kidney failure can be acute to recover can also be chronic. Chronic renal failure who could end up on dialysis routine. In some cases, acute renal failure also may require dialysis but not forever.
Diseases of the kidneys do not always lead to kidney failure. But most of renal failure caused by kidney disease. In children, we recognize two kinds of causes, the cause of congenital or acquired causes.
At age from birth to four years old, inherited disorders are a major cause of kidney failure. Meanwhile, at the age of 5-14 years, most often due to kidney failure hereditary disease, nephrotic syndrome, or systemic disease. At the age of 15-19 years, the most common cause is a glomerular disease, otherwise rare congenital disease as the cause.

Some kidney disorders
Congenital defects: Babies can be born with one kidney, two kidneys but one of them does not work, or was born with kidney in an abnormal location of the stomach. As long as there is one good kidney function, these children can live healthy, but some are at risk of kidney disease in later life.
Hereditary diseases: Some children have kidney with many cysts (polycystic kidney disease), or disease Alport marked excess collagen in glomeruli.
Infections: Systemic infections can cause kidney affected eg haemolytic uraemic syndrome glomeruli or infection due to streptococcus bacteria.
Nephrotic Syndrome: Nephrotic syndrome is a collection of symptoms that indicate kidney damage. Symptoms consist of protein in the urine, hyperlipidemia, swelling, less protein in the blood, can be accompanied by high blood pressure.
Systemic disease with renal insufficiency: for example, children who are sick with lupus.
Kidney pain due to systemic events: kidney disease can be caused when a child has severe dehydration, bleeding, severe accident, or had surgery that causes blood pressure to be down. As a result, blood flow to the kidneys and kidney decreased oxygen deficiency. It often occurs in acute renal failure. Overcoming the cause could also be overcome abnormalities in the kidneys.
Impaired urine disposal: If urine output is interrupted for example because there are rocks, clash in the urinary tract, which suppresses tumor, urine can be turned back into the kidney is called reflux. Over time this blockage can interfere with kidney function. Blockages can also cause urinary stasis which eventually led to the infection. It can damage kidney function.

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