Can focal proliferative purpura nephritis be cured?

Focal proliferative purpura nephritis is generally incurable, and the disease progression can be slowed by drugs.
The nature of allergic purpura is small vessel vasculitis, which can involve the skin, gastrointestinal tract, joints, kidneys and other organs. When the kidneys are damaged, pathologic examination shows that immune complexes are deposited in the glomeruli and glomerular basement membranes of the affected kidneys, resulting in an increase in the thickness of the local tissues, and this kind of allergic purpura accompanied by renal damage is also known as focal accretionary purpuric nephritis or allergic purpuric nephritis.
Typical clinical manifestations of this disease include skin rash, arthralgia, gastrointestinal symptoms such as abdominal pain, kidney damage symptoms such as hematuria, etc., which may be accompanied by fever, malaise and malaise. Generally there is no cure, but only treatment to alleviate clinical symptoms and slow down the progress of the disease.
If you have the above symptoms or suspect that you have allergic purpura nephritis, it is recommended that you go to the hospital in time and follow the doctor’s instructions for treatment.