New Updates in Nephrology and Hypertension
Patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) and diabetes mellitus are more likely to have hypertension. Many persons with diabetic kidney disease have high blood pressure (DKD). Inability to properly treat hypertension in this group of patients increases the risk of cardiovascular high blood glucose, also known as glucose intolerance, for example, can cause damage to the veins of the kidneys. When veins are damaged, they don't function properly, and a large proportion of people with diabetes develop hypertension, which can injure the kidneys. Macro albuminuria (egg whites to keratinize ratio) is a symptom of diabetic kidney disease. [ACR] >35 mg/moll [400 mg/g]), or micro albuminuria (ACR 3.5-35.0 mg/mmol [35-400 mg/g]) associated with retinopathy (type 1 or type 2), as well as type 1 diabetes mellitus for more than 11 years (T1DM). If these conditions are met, diabetes mellitus can be the cause of persistent renal disease in many diabetic people. Different causes of diabetic kidney disease should be examined in the context of any of the following conditions: GFR that is rapidly deteriorating, the absence of diabetic retinopathy, the presence of dynamic urinary dregs, or signs or symptoms of another fundamental disease19.

