The life expectancy of patients with chronic nephritis is related to the severity of the disease, the effect of treatment and other factors, and cannot be generalized.
There are very many types of chronic nephritis, and those with milder pathological types of chronic nephritis, such as mild thylakoid proliferative glomerulonephritis, membranous nephropathy, etc., can be converted to urinary protein through treatment, and clinical cure may also be achieved, and at this time, life expectancy is usually not affected.
While some patients with more serious pathological types, such as focal segmental glomerulosclerosis, membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis patients, even after active treatment, renal function may still gradually decline, ultimately leading to uremia, at this time may affect the life expectancy, but the specific survival time can not be generalized.
Patients with chronic nephritis are advised 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.