How many years you can live with creatinine 100μmol/L mainly depends on the cause of its elevation. If the creatinine is elevated due to physiological reasons or acute kidney injury, the creatinine may return to normal after correcting the reversible factors, which usually does not affect the life expectancy; if the creatinine is elevated due to chronic kidney disease, if the treatment is not good, with the progress of the disease, the creatinine may be developed into uremia, which may affect the life expectancy at this time.
The normal value of blood creatinine is 53~106μmol/L for adult male and 44~97μmol/L for adult female, 100μmol/L is normal or mildly elevated.
Some of the elevated creatinine is caused by the patient’s own high muscle content, or eating more meat and exercising more in general. After changing the lifestyle, the creatinine may return to normal and usually does not affect the life expectancy.
If there is acute kidney injury caused by diarrhea, obstruction and other factors, creatinine may return to normal after correcting reversible factors, which does not affect life expectancy. If there is impaired renal function caused by chronic kidney disease such as glomerulonephritis, if the condition is not treated in time or the treatment is not effective, resulting in the progression of the disease, it may develop into uremia, and at this time, it may affect the life expectancy.
If you find elevated creatinine, it is recommended to go to regular hospitals in time, improve the examination to clarify the cause of the disease, and then give targeted treatment or therapy under the guidance of the doctor.