Routine follow-up

Chronic kidney disease

Long-term loss of kidney filtering ability, often silent until advanced. Stage, cause, and urine protein guide how often you’re monitored and which drugs are adjusted.

Preview — not yet published

This page is in editorial and medical review. Content below is a scaffold — treat it as a preview, not guidance.

In plain language

What chronic kidney disease is

A short definition first, before any detail.

Long-term loss of kidney filtering ability, often silent until advanced. Stage, cause, and urine protein guide how often you’re monitored and which drugs are adjusted.

A plain-language analogy will appear here once editorial and medical review are complete.

Also known as: CKD, chronic kidney disease, kidney disease, reduced kidney function.

What patients usually want to know first

Urgency and next steps

Orientation before detail — so you know where you stand.

Urgency

Routine follow-up

This is typically managed through scheduled visits with your care team.

Symptoms that matter

Common signs, and red flags

Red-flag symptoms are the ones that need same-day attention.

Common symptoms

A reviewed list of common symptoms will appear here once editorial and medical review are complete.

Red-flag symptoms

If you have any of these, contact your doctor — or, for emergencies, call your local emergency number.

A reviewed red-flag list will appear here once editorial and medical review are complete.

What happens after diagnosis

Likely tests and referrals

The common next steps, in roughly the order they usually come.

A reviewed list of likely tests and referrals will appear here once editorial and medical review are complete.

Questions to ask your doctor

Practical prompts for your next visit

Not a script — a starting point. Bring the ones that matter to you.

  • What CKD stage am I in, and what changed my most recent labs?

  • What is likely causing my kidney disease, and can we slow progression?

  • Which of my medications need dose changes or should be avoided as function changes?

  • When should I see a nephrologist, and how often will you repeat testing?

  • What diet or fluid advice actually matters at my stage—not generic advice?

Treatment pathways

Common routes — not personalized advice

Your care team decides what's right for you based on type, stage, and overall health.

A reviewed summary of treatment pathways will appear here once editorial and medical review are complete.

Types, stages, or subconditions

Why the specific type can matter

Different types or stages can have very different treatment options and outlooks.

A reviewed overview of types or stages will appear here once editorial and medical review are complete.

Research and clinical trials

When research may be worth considering

Research isn't the first step for everyone — it's an option to know about.

Clinical trials can offer access to new treatments, extra monitoring, or another option when standard treatments aren’t a fit. Whether a trial is worth considering depends on your specific situation — and on timing.

Keep reading

More on this condition

Review, sources, and disclaimer

How this page was reviewed

Medical review

Pending medical review. This page will list the reviewing clinician and review date before publication.

Sources

Sources will be listed here before publication. We prefer guideline-level and patient-trusted references.

This page is educational, not medical advice. Talk with your care team about decisions that apply to you. If something feels urgent, contact your doctor — or, for emergencies, call your local emergency number.