Uremia

Condition of the blood caused by retention of urinary matter normally eliminated by the kidneys.


Toxic condition associated with chronic renal failure and produced by excess levels of urea, creatinine, and other nitrogen-based compounds in the blood.


Toxic condition of excessive waste products, protein, and nitrogen in the blood caused by renal insufficiency.


Excess accumulation of waste products and chemicals in the blood because of kidney failure and the inability to adequately excrete these substances in the urine.


The presence of urinary constituents in the blood. Symptoms include nausea, vomiting, headache, vertigo, and coma.


Blood urea levels above 25 mg/dL.


A condition resulting from permanent and irreversible loss of kidney function, called end-stage renal disease.


Presence of excessive amounts of urea and other nitrogen-containing wastes in the blood; it occurs in kidney failure, producing symptoms of nausea, vomiting, and lethargy, and leading if uncorrected to death.


Excessive urea and nitrogenous wastes in the blood.


A generalized toxic condition caused by the failure of the kidneys to eliminate waste materials. Symptoms include vomiting, headache, dizziness, an odor of urine on the breath, poor vision, and seizures. Uremia may be caused by acute or chronic illness of the kidneys, overwhelming infection, and by trauma such as bums or shock.


An abnormal accumulation of urea and other metabolic waste products in the bloodstream. Uremia is caused by impaired kidney function and occurs when the kidneys are unable to filter the waste product urea from the blood. Symptoms of uremia include nausea, vomiting, loss of appetite, hiccups, weakness, itching, and mental confusion.


The presence of excessive amounts of urea and other nitrogenous waste compounds in the blood. These waste products are normally excreted by the kidneys in urine; their accumulation in the blood occurs in kidney failure and results in nausea, vomiting, lethargy, drowsiness, and eventually (if untreated) death. Treatment may require ‘hemodialysis on a kidney machine.


A serious disorder in which the body is poisoned by the failure of the kidneys to remove wastes from the bloodstream.


The condition characterized by an excessive accumulation of urea and other waste substances in the blood is known as uremia.


The accumulation of substances in the bloodstream that are typically excreted in urine, resulting from the kidneys’ inability to eliminate them. This condition is marked by symptoms such as headaches, dizziness, vomiting, vision loss, seizures, and unconsciousness.


 


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