Treatment will depend on your symptoms, age, and general health. It will also depend on how severe the condition is and the underlying cause of the condition. Some cases of glomerulonephritis get better on their own.
If the illness continues, you may have kidney failure. This has no cure. Treatments focus on slowing the progression of the disease and preventing complications. Treatment may include:
- Blood pressure medicines such as ACE (angiotensin-converting enzyme) inhibitors that protect blood flow into the kidneys.
- Corticosteroids to decrease inflammation that leads to scar tissue.
- Diuretics (water pills) to remove excess fluid in the body through more urine production.
- Diet changes including eating less protein, sodium, and potassium.
- Dialysis to remove wastes and fluid from the blood after the kidneys have stopped working.
- Kidney transplant to replace your diseased kidney with a healthy kidney from a donor.