Diabetes is the leading cause of kidney failure in the
United States. Early detection of kidney damage increases your likelihood of
preventing kidney failure. Regular visits to your health professional, periodic
urine tests, and lifestyle changes may decrease your risk for developing kidney
disease (diabetic nephropathy), preventing kidney
failure.
You should minimize your risk factors, which include:
You cannot control some risk factors, such as age, race (African
American or Native American), and other genetic factors. But you can reduce
your risk for diabetic nephropathy by not smoking, controlling both your blood
glucose and your blood pressure, losing weight, and having a yearly screening
test for protein in your urine.
When the kidneys are damaged by diabetes, they cannot properly
filter wastes from your body and they begin to eliminate an essential protein,
albumin. Your health professional can monitor your urine for the amount of
albumin you are losing and use this information to detect kidney damage as
early as possible.
- A microalbuminuria test detects very small
amounts of protein in your urine, indicating early kidney damage. If you have
small amounts of protein in your urine, your doctor will prescribe a medicine
to slow the progression of the disease. Microalbuminuria also is a sign that
you are at risk for heart disease.
- A macroalbuminuria test can
reveal large amounts of protein in the urine, indicating severe damage to the
kidneys and possible kidney failure.
The difference between these two tests is shown in the table
below.
Tests for urine proteinTest | What it detects | Next steps, if you test
positive |
|---|
| Microalbuminuria | Extremely small amounts of protein in your urine: This
suggests early kidney damage before it is noticeable on exam or by other tests.
Microalbuminuria can develop years before kidney failure occurs. | - Prevent progression of nephropathy by
having a hemoglobin A1c of below 7% and by keeping your blood pressure at or
below 130/80.
- Reduce protein in the diet.
- Start taking
an angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor or angiotensin II receptor
blocker (ARB).
- Avoid medicines, such as nonsteroidal
anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), that can damage kidneys.
|
| Macroalbuminuria | Larger amounts of protein in your urine; advanced kidney
damage | - Follow the above
treatments.
- If kidney damage is severe, begin dialysis.
|