Urea, or waste products, in the saliva may cause an ammonia-like taste in the mouth
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Kidney failure and damage to red blood cells cause 15% of patients deaths and half the survivors develop chronic kidney failure, requiring dialysis.
The difference between acute renal (kidney) failure and chronic kidney failure, is that acute is a sudden onset. Something like a medical condition, trama, or surgery can cause the failure within days or even hrs. Chrinic kidney failure is slow damage to the kidney over a few years, resulting in the kidneys not being able to filter blood properly.
Yes, high blood pressure can cause kidney disease, and so monitoring urine for protein is an important test for patients with high blood pressure.