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27th European Nephrology Conference, will be organized around the theme “Novotel Barcelona Cornellà”

EURO NEPHROLOGY 2023 is comprised of 24 tracks and 5 sessions designed to offer comprehensive sessions that address current issues in EURO NEPHROLOGY 2023.

Submit your abstract to any of the mentioned tracks. All related abstracts are accepted.

Register now for the conference by choosing an appropriate package suitable to you.

Chronic kidney disease is a long-term disorder that doesn’t recover over time. It is commonly caused by high blood pressure. In the early phases of chronic kidney disease, you may have few signs or symptoms. Chronic kidney disease may not become superficial until your kidney function is significantly reduced.

Chronic kidney disease typically gets worse slowly and symptoms may not appear until kidneys are critically damaged. In the late stages of CKD, if close to kidney failure, may notice symptoms that are caused by waste and extra fluid building up in your body.

Treatment for chronic kidney disease emphases on slowing the progress of the kidney damage, usually by regulating the underlying cause, chronic kidney disease can develop to end-stage kidney failure, which is lethal without dialysis or a kidney transplant.

  • Track 1-1Gitelman and Bartter Syndromes
  • Track 1-2Lowe Syndrome
  • Track 1-3Lowe Syndrome
  • Track 1-4Chronic Tubulointerstitial Nephritis

Entrepreneurs from any field can exhibit their products and can give a demonstration on their products which should be supportive in professional development and marketing.Euro Nephrology 2020 assists a unique platform for renovating potential ideas into great business. The meeting builds a global platform aimed to connect Worldwide Entrepreneurs, Sponsors and the Investors in the field of Nephrology, Technology and many more. It’s associated sciences to develop and facilitate the most enhanced and viable business for engaging people in to constructive deliberations, evaluation and execution of promising business.

Kidney disease treatment usually focuses on controlling the fundamental cause of the disease. This means physician will help you better manage blood pressure, blood sugar and cholesterol levels. Usually kidney disease does not have signs or symptoms in early stages. Testing is the only way to know how the kidneys are performing. It is important to get tested for kidney disease if having the key risk factors - diabetes, high blood pressure, heart disease, or a family history of kidney failure.

  • Track 4-1Medications to keep your heart healthy
  • Track 4-2Phosphate binders to control your phosphate levels
  • Track 4-3Injections, including erythropoietin and iron, to control your anaemia

Anaemia is a common disorder in kidney disease and other conditions where there are not enough blood cells or not enough haemoglobin to carry oxygen around the body.

Anemia commonly occurs in people with chronic kidney disease the permanent, partial loss of kidney functions. Anemia might begin to develop in the initial stages of CKD, when someone has 20 to 50% of normal kidney function. Anemia tends to get worse as CKD progresses. Most people, who have complete loss of kidney function or kidney failure, have anemia. A person has kidney failure when he or she needs a kidney transplantation or dialysis in order to live.

  • Track 5-1Vitamin D to maintain strong bones and other benefits

Geriatric Nephrology is the branch of Internal Medicine and Geriatric Medicine that deals with kidney diseases. It is an emergent subspecialty of geriatrics. Patients who are alive longer may get diseases that accelerate chronic kidney disease, which regularly remains undetected until patients are challenged with the sudden need for dialysis.

Geriatric Nephrology aims to study of assess the clinical efficacy of total and regional bone densitometry in a large Continuous Ambulatory Peritoneal Dialysis (CAPD) populace and to determine the clinical, biological and radiographic variables that best acknowledged osteopenia CAPD patients.

Factors which affects Geriatrics in Kidney Diseases

  • Age related Kidney changes
  • Glomerular Filtration Rate (eGFR, rGFR)
  • Homeostasis Maintenance in Elderly Kidneys
  • Dialysis
  • Medications & Treatment Methods
  • Track 6-1Anti-hypertensives to control your blood pressure
  • Track 6-2Diuretics to increase your urine output

The kidneys plays a significant role in sustaining healthy bone mass and structure by balancing phosphorus and calcium levels in the blood. Healthy kidneys trigger a form of vitamin D that a person consumes in food, turning it into calcitriol, the active form of the vitamin. Calcitriol helps the kidneys uphold blood calcium levels and endorses the formation of bone.

Previously, health care providers used the word “Renal Osteodystrophy” to define mineral and hormone disturbances caused by kidney disease. These days, renal osteodystrophy only describes bone problems that result from mineral and bone disorder in CKD. Health care providers might use the phrase “chronic kidney disease mineral and bone disorder,” or CKD-MBD, to refer the condition that affects the bones, heart, and blood vessels.

Mineral and bone disorder in CKD occurs when injured kidneys and abnormal hormone levels cause calcium and phosphorus levels in a person’s blood to be out of equilibrium. Mineral and bone disorder commonly occurs in people with CKD and disturbs most people with kidney failure in receipt of dialysis.

Nephrotic syndrome is a disorder marked by very high levels of protein in the urine; low levels of protein in the blood, swelling, especially around the eyes, feet and hands; and high cholesterol. Nephrotic syndrome is a set of indications, not a disease in itself. It can occur with several infections, so prevention relies on regulating the diseases that cause it. Treatment of Nephrotic syndrome focuses on ascertaining and treating the fundamental cause, if possible and dropping high cholesterol, blood pressure and protein in the urine through diet, medication or both. Nephrotic syndrome may go away once the essential cause, if identified, is treated. Though, often a kidney disease is the underlying cause and cannot be treated. In these cases, the kidneys may progressively lose their ability to filter wastes and excess water from the blood. If kidney failure follows, the patient will need to be on dialysis or have a kidney transplant.

Nephrology Nursing

nephrology nurse is a nursing proficient that focus on kidney health. They treat and care for patients that are suffering from kidney diseases as well as those that are at risk of increasing kidney problems. Certain medical complications that nephrology nurses may happenstance include polycystic kidney disease, renal cysts, obstructions, and kidney stones. Since there may be a lot of factors that affect the health of the kidneys, nephrology nurses will typically work with all different types of patients, including children and adults. Nephrology nurses play a significant part in assessing, diagnosing, educating, and treating patients who have advanced or are at risk of developing kidney related problems.

Critical Care

The focussed care of patients whose conditions are lethal and who require complete care and endlessmonitoring, usually in intensive care units are also known as intensive care.

The care of the critically ill with kidney disease characterizes a growing proportion of patients treated by nephrologists in the hospital. As a result, critical care nephrology, melding together the expertise of nephrologists and intensivists, has emerged as a distinct sub-discipline during the past decade.

Tubulointerstitial diseases are clinically dissimilar conditions that share comparable features of tubular and interstitial damage. In severe and sustained cases, the entire kidney may turn out to be complicated, with glomerular dysfunction and even renal failure.

Tubulointerstitial nephritis is a primary injury to renal tubules and interstititum resultant in impaired renal function. The critical form is most often due to allergic drug responses or to infections. The prolonged condition form occurs with a different array of causes, including inherited or metabolic conditions, obstructive uropathy, and chronic exposure to conservational toxins or to definite drugs and herbs. Diagnosis is recommended by history and urinalysis and often confirmed by biopsy. Treatment and prognosis vary by the etiologic and potential reversibility of the syndrome at the time of diagnosis.

  • Track 11-1Acute Tubulointerstitial Nephritis
  • Track 11-2Analgesic Nephropathy

Kidneys are affecting by more than 60 genetic causes either directly or indirectly. Genetic kidney conditions range from comparatively common conditions to very rare diseases. In some are associated with mild symptoms and others can cause serious health conditions.

Genetic disorders of the kidney include cystic syndromes, metabolic syndromes and immune glomerulonephritis. Cystic diseases comprise autosomal dominant and recessive polycystic kidney disease. Neonates with enlarged, cystic kidneys should be evaluated for Polycystic Kidney Diseases.

Polycystic kidney disease is a genetic disorder that causes numerous cysts to produce in the kidneys. These tumours can obstruct with kidney function and cause kidney failure.

  • Track 12-1Cystinosis
  • Track 12-2Nephronophthisis
  • Track 12-3Autosomal Dominant Polycystic Kidney Disease
  • Track 12-4Autosomal Recessive Polycystic Kidney Disease
  • Track 12-5Thin Basement Membrane Disease
  • Track 12-6Collagen-related kidney diseases including Alport Syndrome
  • Track 12-7Hereditary Interstitial Kidney Disease
  • Track 12-8Metabolic Nephropathies
  • Track 12-9Reflux Nephropathy

The kidneys serve significant functions, including filtration and excretion of metabolic waste products, regulation of necessary electrolytes, fluid, and acid-base balance and stimulation of red blood cell production. They also assist to regulate blood pressure via the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system, regulating reabsorption of water and upholding intravascular volume. The kidneys also reabsorb glucose and amino acids and have hormonal functions thru erythropoietin, calcitriol and activation of vitamin D.


  • Track 13-1 Acute Tubular Necrosis
  • Track 13-2Alport Syndrome
  • Track 13-3Renal Failure
  • Track 13-4Kidney Transplantation Clinical Trials

Acute kidney failure occurs when your kidneys suddenly lose the ability to remove excess salts, fluids, and waste materials from the blood. This elimination is the core, kidneys’ main function. Body fluids can upswing to dangerous levels when kidneys lose their filtering capacity. The disorder will also cause electrolytes and waste material to accumulate in your body, which can also be life-threatening.

Acute kidney failure is also termed as acute kidney injury or acute renal failure. It’s common in general public who are previously in the hospital. It may develop promptly over a few hours. Acute kidney failure can be life-threatening and involves intensive treatment. However, it may be rescindable.

Some of the complications of acute kidney failure include:

  • Chronic kidney failure
  • Heart damage
  • Nervous system damage
  • End-stage renal failure
  • High blood pressure
  • Track 14-1Tuberous Sclerosis

The urinary system is the body's drainage system for eliminating wastes and extra water. It comprises kidneys, ureters, a bladder and a urethra. Urinary Tract Infections (UTI’s) are the second most common type of infection in the human body.

Urologic diseases or conditions consist of urinary tract infections, kidney stones, bladder control problems and prostate problems. Some urologic disorders last only a short time, while others are lifelong.

You may have a UTI if you notice

  • Pain or burning when you urinate
  • Fever, tiredness, or shakiness
  • An urge to urinate often
  • Pressure in your lower belly
  • Urine that smells bad or looks cloudy or reddish
  • Pain in your back or side below the ribs

People of any age or gender possible to acquire UTIs, but women are more susceptible to get UTIs as men. Urinary tract infections (UTIs) are bacterial infections of any fragment of the urinary system. Infections are in the bladder and urethras are the most common. They are certainly curable and infrequently lead to more health problems. However, if the infections are untreated, these infections can spread to the kidneys and cause kidney failure.

  • Track 15-1Urethritis
  • Track 15-2Cystitis
  • Track 15-3Urinary Abnormalities in Children
  • Track 15-4Obstruction of The Urinary Tract
  • Track 15-5Cancers of the Kidney and Genitourinary Tract
  • Track 15-6Pediatric Urology & Female Urology
  • Track 15-7Reconstructive Urology
  • Track 15-8Bladder Cancer
  • Track 15-9Stress Urinary Incontinence
  • Track 15-10Urothelial Tumors
  • Track 15-11Hyperoxaluria

Kidney Infection (Pyelonephritis)

kidney infection is one of the urinary tract infections (UTI). Most kidney infections are caused by bacteria or viruses that first infect the lower urinary tract. Then, the infection travels upstream to one or both kidneys, which are part of the upper urinary tract.

In some cases, the kidney infection will occurs after surgery if bacteria enter into the body during the process and travel through your blood to the kidneys.

kidney infection requires quick medical care. If the medical care is taken properly, a kidney infection can permanently damage your kidneys or the bacteria can spread to your bloodstream and cause a life-threatening septicity.

Onco-Nephrology (Kidney Cancer)

Onco-nephrology comprises the extensive range of kidney disorders that can arise in patients with cancer. Beyond cancers of the kidney, non-renal cancers can have renal complications, and anticancer therapies, including chemotherapy.

Kidney cancer also called renal cancer is a disease in which kidney cells become malignant and grow out of control, forming a tumor. More or less all kidney tumours first appear in the lining of tiny tubes in the kidney. This kind of kidney cancer is termed as renal cell carcinoma. The most of kidney cancers are found afore they spread to distant organs. And cancers caught early are easier to treat fruitfully.

  • Track 16-1Pyelonephritis
  • Track 16-2Pediatric Urology & Female Urology
  • Track 16-3Urethral Cancer
  • Track 16-4Myeloma Kidney

High blood pressure can impair blood vessels in the kidneys, decreasing their ability to work properly. When the force of blood stream is high, blood vessels stretch so blood flows more easily. Eventually, this elongating scars and weakens blood vessels all over the body, including those in the kidneys.

If the kidneys blood vessels are damaged, they may stop eradicating wastes and extra fluid from the body. Further fluid in the blood vessels may then raise blood pressure even more, building a precarious cycle. And it shows the symptoms like swelling called Edema, which occurs when the kidneys cannot get rid of excessive fluid and salt. Edema can occur in the legs, feet or ankles and less frequently in the hands or face. Once kidney function diminutions further, symptoms can include.

  • Track 17-1Kidney Cancer

If you have kidney failure and cannot have a kidney transplant, dialysis can sustain lifetime.

Dialysis is an artificial technique of filtering the blood. It is used when somebody’s kidneys have failed or are close to deteriorating. Many people with late-stage kidney disease must go on dialysis enduringly or until a donor kidney is found.

There are two types of dialysis: Hemodialysis and Peritoneal dialysis.

Hemodialysis

In hemodialysis, the blood is pumped through a distinctive machine that filters out waste products and fluid. You can perform the hemodialysis event at your home. Most people have three sittings per week, with each sitting lasting three to five hours. However, hemodialysis can also be done in petite, more common sessions.

The common side effects of hemodialysis are low blood pressure, muscle cramping, and itching.

Peritoneal dialysis

In peritoneal dialysis, the peritoneum stands in for the kidneys. A tube is embedded and used to fill the abdomen with a fluid called dialysate. Waste products are in the blood flow from the peritoneum into the dialysate. The dialysate is then drained from the abdomen.

There are two methods of peritoneal dialysis: Continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis, where the abdomen is filled and drained several times during the day and Continuous cycler-assisted peritoneal dialysis, which uses a mechanism to cycle the fluid in and out of the abdomen at night while the person sleeps.

The most common side effects of peritoneal dialysis are contagions in the abdominal cavity or in the area where the tube was embedded. Supplementary side effects may include weight gain and hernias.

  • Track 19-1Hemodialysis
  • Track 19-2Peritoneal Dialysis
  • Track 19-3Continuous Ambulatory Peritoneal Dialysis
  • Track 19-4Continuous Cycling Peritoneal Dialysis
  • Track 19-5Intermittent Peritoneal Dialysis

Kidney transplant is one of the most common organ transplant surgeries executed nowadays.

A kidney transplant is a surgical method that’s done to treat Kidney Failure. This surgery is a lifesaving choice for thousands of patients with End Stage Renal Disease. The kidneys filter waste from the blood and eliminate it from the body through your urine. They also help to maintain your body’s fluid and electrolyte balance. If your kidneys stop functioning, waste builds up in your body and can make you very sick.

A kidney transplant is a treatment for kidney failure; it is not a cure, so need to take medicines every day to make sure your immune system doesn't reject the new kidney. A working transplanted kidney does a healthier job of filtering wastes and keeping you healthy than dialysis. Though, a kidney transplant isn’t for everybody.

  • Track 20-1Kidney Allocation Policies
  • Track 20-2Xenotransplantation
  • Track 20-3Transplant Tourism
  • Track 20-4Tolerance

Many diseases affect kidney function by offensive the glomeruli, the tiny units within the kidney where blood is cleaned. Glomerular diseases comprise many conditions with a variety of genetic and environmental causes, but they fall into two major categories.

Glomerular diseases damage the glomeruli, allowing protein and sometimes red blood cells drip into the urine. Sometimes a glomerular disease also hinders with the clearance of waste products by the kidney, so they begin to build up in the blood. Furthermore, loss of blood proteins like albumin in the urine can outcome in a fall in their level in the bloodstream. In normal blood, albumin acts like a sponge, drawing extra fluid from the body into the bloodstream, where it residues until the kidneys remove it. But when albumin leaks into the urine, the blood loses its capacity to engross extra fluid from the body. Fluid can accumulate outside the cardiovascular system in the face, hands, feet, or ankles and cause swelling.

Glomerular disease sometimes develops rapidly after an infection in other parts of the body.

 
  • Track 21-1Glomerulonephritis
  • Track 21-2Acute post-streptococcal Glomerulonephritis
  • Track 21-3Bacterial Endocarditis
  • Track 21-4Glomerulosclerosis
  • Track 21-5Focal segmental Glomerulosclerosis
  • Track 21-6Membranous Nephropathy

Kidneys are vital to having a healthy body. They are essentially responsible for sieving waste products, excess water, and other impurities out of the blood.

Kidney disease ensues when your kidneys become impaired and not able to perform their function. Damage of the kidney may be caused by diabetes, high blood pressure and various other chronic conditions. Kidney disease can lead to other health problems, including weak bones, nerve damage, and malnutrition. If the disease gets worse over time, your kidneys may stop working completely. Most kidney diseases attack the nephrons.

Generally kidney diseases are won’t go away for one time diagnosis. The best way to uphold kidney health is to implement a healthy lifestyle. Kidney diseases can get worse over time. It may even lead to kidney failure. Some risk factors for kidney disease, such as age, gender, ethnicity or family history are impossible to control. However, there are methods you can take to help prevent kidney disease,

  • Drink plenty of water
  • Control blood sugar if you have diabetes
  • Control blood pressure
  • Reduce salt intake
  • Quit smoking
  • Track 22-1Acute Kidney Failure/Acute Kidney Injury
  • Track 22-2Acute Tubular Necrosis
  • Track 22-3Alport Syndrome
  • Track 22-4Analgesic Nephropathy
  • Track 22-5β-Thalassemia Renal Disease
  • Track 22-6Renal Failure
  • Track 22-7Nephrotoxicity
  • Track 22-8Cardiorenal syndrome
  • Track 22-9Chronic Kidney Disease or End Stage Renal Disease
  • Track 22-10Diabetic Kidney Disease
  • Track 22-11Fabry’s Disease
  • Track 22-12Glomerular Diseases
  • Track 22-13IgA Nephropathy
  • Track 22-14Kidney Stones, Nephrolithiasis
  • Track 22-15Nephrotic Syndrome
  • Track 22-16Sickle Cell Nephropathy

Pediatric Nephrology delivers care and management for broods with various kidney diseases, including Nephrotic syndrome, urinary tract infections, hematuria, proteinuria, hypertension, electrolyte disorders, complications of kidney stones and enuresis conditions.

If your child has kidney or urinary tract disease, bladder problems, kidney stones or high blood pressure, a Pediatric nephrologist has the exceptional skills and experience to treat your child. Pediatric nephrologists treat children from infancy through late puberty and in some centers up to young adulthood.

Pediatric nephrologists diagnose, treat, and manage many disorders distressing the kidney and urinary tract, including kidney failure, hypertension, genetic kidney diseases, kidney stones, urinary tract infections and abnormalities in the urine such as blood and protein. They also know how to assess and treat problems with growth and development that are specifically related to chronic kidney disease.

  • Track 23-1Pediatric Renal Failure
  • Track 23-2Kidney Care in Children
  • Track 23-3Pediatric Kidney Dialysis
  • Track 23-4Pediatric Nephritis
  • Track 23-5Advances in Pediatric Kidney Operation
  • Track 23-6Pediatric Renal Nutrition
  • Track 23-7Pediatric Renal Transplantation
  • Track 23-8Pediatric Kidney Stones
  • Track 23-9Pediatric Chronic Hemodialysis
  • Track 23-10Pediatric Urology

Nephrology is the scientific study of kidneys, predominantly their functions and ailments. The preservation of kidney health and the treatment of kidney disease from diet and medication to renal replacement therapyNephrology also studies systemic disorders that affect the kidneys, such as diabetes and autoimmune disease and systemic diseases that arise as a result of kidney disease.

 
  • Track 24-1Acute and Chronic Renal diseases
  • Track 24-2Diabetic Nephropathy
  • Track 24-3Dialysis
  • Track 24-4Hemofiltration
  • Track 24-5Experimental Nephrology