
Audio By Carbonatix
Head of Nephrology Unit at the Department of Medicine and Therapeutics, University of Ghana, has said that developing an acute kidney injury puts one at risk of future chronic kidney disease.
Speaking on Joy FM’s Ultimate Health on Sunday, Dr. Vincent Boima explained that the kidneys are likely to suffer from two common injuries namely; acute kidney injury and chronic kidney injury.
He said the acute kidney injury “occurs abruptly within a short time in hours to days which leads to accumulation of toxins.”
He added that this comes as a result of short term illnesses like diarrhoea, vomiting, typhoid, heart disease, liver disease, drugs that one may have taken in etc.
He noted that acute injuries are reversible when the problems associated to the injury gets treated or corrected.
He explained that although an acute injury may be treatable, it, however, leaves the individual open to future chronic kidney disease.
“So chronic kidney disease is not the same as acute. So when you have a kidney injury which recovers then it is most likely an acute injury which had recovered,” he said.
He stated that chronic kidney injury on the other hand “is a type of kidney disease that had been going on for some time so your doctors will need your kidney function within the next three months or more to see whether the kidney dysfunction has been persisting for this period. They would also need a scan to look at the appearance of the kidney, the sizes of the kidney – whether blurred or reduced to suggest that it’s a chronic kidney disease.
According to him, if the dysfunction has been persisting for three months period or more, it signifies chronic kidney disease.
He also said, “Perhaps noticing protein in the urine or blood in the urine as well in three months or more is a sign of chronic kidney disease.”
He advised people experiencing these symptoms to see a doctor and have tests performed to determine whether they have kidney disease rather than undergoing one lab test saying they have kidney disease due to the symptoms they are experiencing.
Latest Stories
-
Former Effia MP demands full disclosure of Truedare AI deal, warns of ‘hidden risks’
14 minutes -
Joseph Cudjoe raises alarm over potential revenue loss in Truedare AI Customs deal
15 minutes -
Video: Awoshie-Anyaa Highway: Years of fatal crashes caused by faulty traffic lights
19 minutes -
No financial transactions with Ghana Card yet, says NIA
25 minutes -
Former Netherlands Fire Chief engages GNFS Tema Command on capacity building
26 minutes -
Finance Ministry defends Publican AI rollout amid stakeholder concerns
29 minutes -
Police arrest 5 in Asankrangwa robbery; cash and guns retrieved
30 minutes -
Why I joined NPP – Jeneral Ntatia
30 minutes -
Three UDS students remanded over alleged armed robbery
34 minutes -
Kudus Mohammed at risk of missing World Cup 2026 after fresh injury blow
37 minutes -
Minority urges cocoa farmers to resist pressure from galamseyers
37 minutes -
President Mahama applauds astronaut Christina Koch’s Ghana ties in Artemis II mission
39 minutes -
Ex-wife of Richard Nii Armah Quaye moves to Court of Appeal
41 minutes -
Insecurity: US orders non-emergency staff to leave embassy in Nigeria
41 minutes -
ASFC 2026: Ghana U15 girls set up Burkina Faso final after win over Zambia
45 minutes