Chronic glomerulonephritis is generally not terrible, and the vast majority of chronic glomerulonephritis can be treated with medication to slow down the progression of kidney disease. Chronic glomerulonephritis is a large group of renal diseases manifested by hematuria, proteinuria, edema, hypertension, etc., and its severity varies greatly, with the lighter ones only manifesting a small amount of hematuria or proteinuria, and no creatinine elevation, edema, hypertension, etc. At this time, even if no medication is applied, the patients’ renal function can be maintained stable for a long period of time. Some patients with chronic nephritis after lifestyle changes, dietary control and the necessary drug therapy, can make the urine protein drop, and even achieve clinical cure, long-term maintenance of stable renal function, generally will not enter the uremia. Only a small number of chronic glomerulonephritis will make the glomerular filtration rate gradually decline, and eventually lead to uremia. However, even if it leads to uremia, the life span of patients can still be significantly prolonged through hemodialysis, peritoneal dialysis and kidney transplantation. Chronic glomerulonephritis should be treated in a regular hospital in time and under the guidance of doctors.