U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES

A public education program to reduce the burden of kidney disease

Monitoring your Kidney Health

Many people with kidney disease don't have symptoms until their kidney damage is very advanced. For most people, the only way to know about your kidney health is through blood and urine tests. The blood test checks your GFR and the urine test checks for albumin. These two tests are also used to follow the progression of your kidney disease.

Know your GFR and urine test results. Keep track of them over time to see how your kidneys are doing. Kidney disease tends to get worse over time. Each time you get checked, ask how the results compare to the last results.

The key tests to track kidney health include:

Blood pressure

The most important thing you can do to slow down CKD is keep your blood pressure at or below the target set by your health care provider. This may delay or prevent kidney failure.

GFR

The GFR tells you how well your kidneys are filtering blood. GFR stands for glomerular filtration rate. You can't raise your GFR. The goal is to keep your GFR from going down to prevent or delay kidney failure.

A1C

A1C test is a test that shows the average blood glucose level over the last 3 months. Lowering your A1C can help you to stay healthy. (For people with diabetes only.)

Bring this table to your health care visits and ask your provider to complete it.

Other tests can also be used to monitor kidney health. Bring Your Kidney Test Results worksheet to your next visit.

Test Result/Date Result/Date Result/Date Result/Date
Blood pressure
Goal: Less than ___/___
       
GFR
Goal: Keep from going down
       
Urine Albumin
Goal: The lower the better
       
A1C (for people with diabetes)
Goal:
       

Other tests can also be used to monitor kidney health. Bring Your Kidney Test Results worksheet to your next visit.