Should acute nephritis be treated with hormonal shock therapy?

Acute nephritis is usually not treated with hormone shock therapy. Acute nephritis is a series of syndromes caused by streptococcal infections, often manifested as hematuria, proteinuria, edema, hypertension, and in some cases, transient renal insufficiency. Acute nephritis in the clinic has a certain degree of self-healing, treatment to control infection, bed rest is the main, in principle, unnecessary hormone shock treatment; if the patient after rest, control infection condition is not obvious improvement, blood creatinine continues to rise, can consider the treatment of renal puncture, if necessary, hormone shock treatment. When patients with acute nephritis, they should consult the hospital in time, complete the relevant laboratory tests, follow the doctor’s instructions to standardize the treatment, do not self-medication, and at the same time need to be regularly rechecked, discomfort follow-up.