Can you recover from chronic kidney failure?

Chronic renal failure usually cannot be fully recovered, and active treatment can slow down the progression of kidney disease.
Chronic renal failure caused by various renal diseases, such as primary glomerulonephritis, secondary nephropathy, hereditary nephropathy, etc., the patient’s kidney structure is damaged, mainly glomerular and interstitial damage, and the damaged glomeruli can not be completely recovered, so chronic renal failure usually can not be completely recovered.
However, with active drug treatment, especially early active control, patients’ renal function can be maintained stable for a long time and slow down the progression of kidney disease. If the primary disease is not actively treated, patients’ renal function will often deteriorate rapidly and may even progress to uremia within a few years.
Therefore, patients with chronic renal failure need to actively treat the primary disease under the guidance of specialists in regular hospitals, and at the same time, treat various complications, avoiding the application of a variety of secret prescriptions, so as not to aggravate kidney damage.