Nephritis is also known as glomerulonephritis, which is a very common glomerular disease in clinic. The severity of nephritis is not necessarily related to gender, that is to say, it is not that nephritis in males must be very serious, some male nephritis is milder and some male nephritis is more serious. If men are diagnosed with cryptogenic nephritis, they can have no symptoms, no edema, no increase in blood pressure and no decrease in renal function, but only in urinalysis can be found to have microscopic hematuria, polygraphic hematuria, or proteinuria, usually the urine protein is only a mild to moderate increase, and does not need special drug treatment. If the male nephritis shows a lot of proteinuria, hypoproteinemia, edema or even a decline in renal function, and the renal pathology shows proliferative glomerulonephritis, this kind of nephritis is more serious, because it is usually ineffective for hormone and immunosuppressant treatment, and it is easy to become uremia in a short time.