yes but you cant drink alchol because your one kidney is not going to be strong enough to handle.
Of course, he can if that other one is well functioning but he will need to check the renal function from time to time.
Yes, but it's not healthy
You can survive with one kidney because it can do the work of both! However, people living with one kidney have to be very cautious of their lifestyle choices as leading an unhealthy life would lead to kidney failure faster than a person with two kidneys.
then may be that person will have small life span and he will not able to play like normal children.
A person can live a normal healthy life with just one kidney.
A person shold lead there own life. They should lead their own life because it is their life to lead not anyone elses. Tyler A.
You don't, many people live with one kidney and you can donate a kidney if you want to.
gluten intolerance is not life devastating. If you learn what to eat and not to eat you can have a normal life. Just strive for balance between being too careful and too adventurous.
a person with damaged kidneys can live a relatively normal life through dialysis and strict dieting until the kidneys are allowed to heal. a person with irreversible damage will eventually need a kidney transplant and will have to have dialysis daily as well as a strict diet until they receive a new kidney.
advantages: you will live and can get off dialysisdisadvantages: you have to have a kidney transplant
No it is not possible, yes in ESR stage some people are living. End-stage renal disease is where a persons' kidney function is too low to adequately support life without support, around 10% or less of normal function. Obviously without either kidney there will be no function.
normal as any other person normal as any other person
With medical management and treatment, you can lead a normal life with lupus.
A kidney transplant would be better because a kidney machine doesn't fix the problem, it just takes the toxins out of the body. Also you have to spend, on average, 3-4 days a week at hospital for dialysis. You have to take the anti-rejection drugs the rest of your life probably but that is a small price to pay compared to losing your life, I would think, however you can reject the kidney and possibly forfit your life.