Is There a Cure for Kidney Failure?
Kidney failure, also known as end-stage renal disease (ESRD), occurs when your kidneys are no longer able to perform their essential functions, such as filtering waste and excess fluids from your blood. If you or a loved one are facing kidney failure, you may wonder: Can kidney failure be cured?
While there isn’t a direct “cure” for kidney failure at this time, there are treatments and management strategies that can help you live well and even extend your life.
Treatment Options for Kidney Failure
Although kidney failure itself may not be reversible, there are two main treatments that can help manage the condition: dialysis and kidney transplantation.
1. Dialysis
Dialysis is a life-saving treatment that performs the work your kidneys no longer can. There are two types of dialysis:
Hemodialysis: This type of dialysis uses a machine to filter your blood outside your body. A needle is inserted into a vein, and your blood is sent through a filter that removes waste, excess fluids, and salt. The cleaned blood is then returned to your body.
Peritoneal Dialysis: This treatment uses the lining of your abdomen (the peritoneum) as a natural filter. A sterile solution is placed into your abdomen through a catheter, where it absorbs waste and excess fluids. After a few hours, the solution is drained and replaced with fresh fluid.
Dialysis helps maintain fluid balance and prevents dangerous buildup of waste products in the body, but it is not a cure—it is a form of ongoing treatment.
2. Kidney Transplant
A kidney transplant is the only treatment that offers the potential to restore kidney function permanently. A transplant involves receiving a healthy kidney from a living or deceased donor. After a successful transplant, the new kidney can perform the work of the failed kidneys, allowing you to live a normal, healthy life.
However, kidney transplants are not always an option for everyone. Factors like overall health, compatibility with a donor kidney, and the availability of a donor can affect whether transplant is possible. Even after a transplant, the body’s immune system can sometimes reject the new kidney, which requires careful monitoring and ongoing medication.
Looking Ahead: Stem Cell Treatment Through ImmunoFree
Even if a kidney transplant is successful, the transplant recipient must take immunosuppression medications for the rest of their life to prevent the body from rejecting the kidney. While lifesaving, these drugs have side effects that can heavily impact a recipient’s lifestyle and physical health post-transplant.
ImmunoFree is a new initiative that aims to eliminate the need for immunosuppressive medications for transplant recipients, enabling them to live a longer, healthier life free from the side effects of immunosuppressive medications and without fear of organ rejection.
With ImmunoFree, the kidney donor also donates stem cells, which are transplanted into the kidney transplant recipient to help their immune system accept the transplanted kidney as its own.
To date, more than two dozen kidney transplant patients have undergone the ImmunoFree process and been completely weaned off immunosuppressive medications. To learn more, visit ImmunoFree.com.