Renal failure
Renal failure is referred to partial or complete loss of kidney functioning. Kidney failure can be classified as acute or chronic.
There are certain causes of kidney failure, which comprises of destruction of the tubules in the kidney with drugs or organic solvents like acetone, carbon tetrachloride, and ethylene glycol; exposure to certain compounds of metals such as lead, etc. Separate causes of acute kidney failure includes conditions that limits blood flow or urine flow to the kidney, like a diseases of the liver, a blockage of the renal arteries, and obstruction of the urinary tract; disorders that destroy the cortex of the kidney; severe bacterial infections in the kidney. Chronic renal failure is generally the result of prolonged diseases of the kidney. In chronic failure, the blood turns more acidic than normal and results of calcium from the bones. Nerve degeneration can also occur in some cases.