High blood pressure (hypertension) can quietly damage your body for years
before symptoms develop. If the high blood level can’t be well-controlled, many
risks may attack you. Here I would like to explain the effects of hypertension
on kidneys polyuria.
As we all know, hypertension will increase the burden of your kidneys.
Seriously hypertension will damage our kidneys.
Your kidneys filter excess fluid and waste from your blood — a process that
depends on healthy blood vessels. High blood pressure can injure both the blood
vessels in and leading to your kidneys, causing several types of kidney disease.
Having diabetes in addition to high blood pressure can worsen the damage.
1. High blood pressure is one of the most common causes of kidney failure.
That's because it can damage both the large arteries leading to your kidneys and
the tiny blood vessels (glomeruli) within the kidneys. Damage to either makes it
so your kidneys can't effectively filter waste from your blood. As a result,
dangerous levels of fluid and waste can accumulate. You might ultimately require
dialysis or kidney transplantation.
2. High blood pressure is one of the most common causes of
Glomerulosclerosis. Glomerulosclerosis is a type of kidney damage caused by
scarring of the glomeruli. The glomeruli are tiny clusters of blood vessels
within your kidneys that filter fluid and waste from your blood.
Glomerulosclerosis can leave your kidneys unable to filter waste effectively,
leading to kidney failure.
Effects of hypertension on kidneys polyuria is greatly. Fortunately, with
treatment and lifestyle changes, you can control your high blood pressure to
reduce your risk of life-threatening complications.
With the development of the medical science, more and more new medicine can
help us control the high blood pressure. For patients who have kidneys polyuria
by hypertension, new break through in 2012 is Immunotherapy. It has good effects
in treating kidney disease from clinic data. You can get more information about
Immunotherapy from experts on line.