Acute Kidney Failure
Acute renal failure refers to the sudden failure of the kidneys to filter waste from the blood. Renal disease develops rapidly in a matter of hours or days and can be fatal. Swelling due to fluid retention, decreased urinary output, shortness of breath, fatigue, and nausea are all symptoms. Acute nephrosis occurs when a patient's kidneys have been directly damaged, when a condition slows blood flow to the kidneys, and when the kidneys' urine drainage tubes (ureters) become blocked, preventing waste from leaving the body through urine.
Related Conference of Acute Kidney Failure
October 29-30, 2026
14th European Congress on Nephrology, Internal Medicine and Kidney Diseases
Paris, France

