BioConst生物常量

Research reference only. BioConst updates and corrects content over time, but it cannot replace clinician-guided diagnosis, treatment, medication, or testing decisions.

Kidney

Kidney failure and replacement-therapy context

Kidney failure is the point where kidney function is no longer enough and dialysis or transplant context may enter care.

Clinician-guided interpretation page

This topic can involve test or imaging interpretation, neurological, cardiac, blood, liver, kidney, lung, surgical, medication, or complex underlying-disease context. BioConst keeps this page as an explainer, not a decision guide.

What this means

Kidney failure means kidney function is no longer enough for the body’s needs.[1,2]

What people may notice

  • NIDDK describes dialysis and transplant as treatment contexts for kidney failure.[1,2]
  • Fluid, electrolytes, waste handling, and symptoms may all enter specialist care.[1,2]

Key variables

Dialysis and transplant context

Replacement-therapy context is the boundary variable.[1,2]

Estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR)

Very low GFR belongs in kidney failure context.[1,2]

Kidney electrolyte balance

Electrolyte handling can become clinically important.[1,2]

Why it happens

  • CKD progression, acute severe injury, diabetes, high blood pressure, and other kidney diseases can contribute.[1,2]
  • Cause, timing, and overall health determine care pathways.[1,2]

Clinical response directions

  • Clinical teams may use history, exam, labs, imaging, and specialist review depending on kidney failure context.[1,2]
  • BioConst explains the map and does not diagnose, rank urgency, choose tests, or recommend treatment.[1,2]

Common traps

  • Kidney failure is not the same as one abnormal lab.[1,2]
  • Dialysis timing is not decided by a webpage.[1,2]
  • Transplant eligibility is specialist territory.[1,2]

Related wiki variables