Nephrology

Conditions We Treat

From acute kidney injury and lupus nephritis to end-stage renal disease, we diagnose and manage the full spectrum of non-surgical kidney conditions in adults.

Your kidneys filter approximately 200 litres of blood every day, removing waste, balancing fluid levels, regulating blood pressure, and producing hormones that support red blood cell production and bone health. When kidney function declines, the effects extend far beyond the kidneys themselves. Our department provides non-surgical diagnosis and management of the full range of kidney conditions in adults.

Acute Kidney Conditions

Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a sudden episode of kidney failure or damage that develops within hours or days. It is most often caused by severe infection, blood loss, or medication toxicity, and requires prompt evaluation and treatment to prevent permanent damage.

Chronic Kidney Disease

Chronic kidney disease (CKD) refers to structural or functional kidney abnormalities persisting for more than three months. It is staged from 1 to 5 based on the glomerular filtration rate (GFR), which measures how effectively the kidneys filter blood. A GFR below 60 ml/min confirms a CKD diagnosis. In its early stages CKD causes no symptoms, which is why it is so frequently detected late.

Diabetic Kidney Disease

Diabetic kidney disease (diabetic nephropathy) develops when high blood sugar damages the renal arteries and small blood vessels in the kidneys, gradually impairing their filtering function. It progresses silently and usually shows no symptoms in its early stages. Nearly 50% of end-stage kidney failure patients on dialysis are diabetic.

Autoimmune and Inflammatory Kidney Disease

The kidneys can be directly targeted by the immune system in several autoimmune conditions. These require coordination between nephrology and rheumatology for accurate diagnosis and effective management.

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