Chronic plus acute renal failure is usually not curable; most acute renal failure is potentially curable, but chronic renal failure is usually not completely curable.
Acute renal failure is curable in most cases, and the condition will improve significantly after correcting the reversible causes. If patients with acute renal failure do not take effective treatment in time, they may also be transformed into chronic renal insufficiency, and may even progress directly to uremia, and renal failure caused by this condition is also incurable.
For chronic renal failure caused by reversible etiology, renal function may effectively improve after eliminating the etiology, but the renal damage that has been caused can not be fully recovered; for patients with irreversible chronic renal failure or uremia, it is generally difficult to completely restore the declining renal function, and can only try to delay the deterioration of the condition through treatment, which is usually unable to be cured.
If you are suffering from chronic plus acute renal failure, it is recommended to go to regular hospitals in time and receive standardized treatment under the guidance of doctors.