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Not unless the hypertension has actually resulted in damage to the kidney. If the hypertension is relatively controlled, your kidney function is fine and your overall health is fine, there should be no reason for you not to be a living kidney donor.
Antidiuretic hormone ADH
Yes, kidney stones can remain in your kidney for many years. Until the body tells the stone to move or get out of the kidney, it can remain in place for many, many years causing no problems at all.
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yes it is perfectly fine
In general, no. You can live just fine with one kidney.
The atomic number tells you the number of protons in the nucleus of an atom of the associated element.
The legend tells you the number of inches on a map.
Yes, you can get kidney stones twice, or any number of times.
If it's one healthy kidney, sure. Plenty of people donate one kidney and manage just fine afterwards. The concern would be if whatever it was that caused one kidney not to develop somehow messed up the existing kidney too.
Probably not if you've just lost one (but the other one is working fine); if your one remaining kidney had servery reduced function, you would require a transplant. To get a kidney transplant, your kidney(s) must be functioning at 5% or lower.
An exponent.