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KISometimes the body starts sending signals before anyone says the word kidney.
Your labs begin to shift.
Phosphorus. Potassium. Calcium.
Maybe anemia shows up. Vitamin D drops. You feel tired. Food tastes different. Something just feels off.
And the question becomes the same one many people ask at the beginning.
Why?
Why are these numbers changing?
Why do I feel different?
Why can’t anyone explain what’s happening?
Then one day the picture becomes clearer.
Your kidneys may be part of the story.
Kidneys quietly control many of those numbers. When they begin to struggle, the labs often show it before symptoms fully make sense. That is why knowing your kidney numbers matters.
Ask your doctor two simple questions.
What is my GFR — the number that tells you how well your kidneys are filtering?
And have I had a UACR test — the urine test that checks for protein leaking into the urine?
If you live with diabetes or high blood pressure, these questions are even more important.
Many people start changing diets, adding supplements, or cutting foods without knowing what their body actually needs. But kidney care works best when decisions follow the labs. Your numbers become the guardrails. They help guide what needs attention and what does not.
Kidney health is rarely about one number or one change. It is the full picture.
When you understand your labs, the confusion often turns into clarity.
Sometimes the moment comes when you finally say:
“Oh… now I see why.”
If this helped you understand your kidney numbers a little better, share it with someone you love. Kidney disease affects 1 in 3 adults at risk, and most people do not know their numbers yet.
@kidneyfl










