Mystery Kidney Disease in Central America

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A mysterious epidemic is sweeping Central America – it’s the second biggest cause of death among men in El Salvador, and in Nicaragua it’s a bigger killer of men than HIV and diabetes combined. It’s unexplained but the latest theory is that the victims are literally working themselves to death.
Read more from our partners at the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, a project of The Center for Public Integrity.

A sugarcane worker in Nicaragua (Photo: Anna Maria Barry-Jester)

A sugarcane worker in Nicaragua (Photo: Anna Maria Barry-Jester)

In the western lowlands of Nicaragua, in a region of vast sugarcane fields, sits the tiny community of La Isla.

The small houses are a patchwork of concrete and wood. Pieces of cloth serve as doors.

Maudiel Martinez emerges from his house to greet me. He’s pale, and his cheekbones protrude from his face. He hunches over like an old man – but he is only 19-years-old.

“The way this sickness is – you see me now, but in a month I could be gone. It can take you down all of a sudden,” he says.

Maudiel’s kidneys are failing. They do not perform the essential function of filtering waste from his body. He’s being poisoned from the inside.

When he got ill two years ago, he was already familiar with this disease and how it might end. “I thought about my father and grandfather,” he says. Both died of the same condition. Three of his brothers have it too.

All of them worked in the sugarcane fields.

Male deaths from kidney disease (Graphic: BBC)

(Graphic: BBC)

Kidney disease has killed so many men here that locals now call their community not simply La Isla – which means “The Island” – but La Isla de las Viudas – “The Island of the Widows.”

 

The epidemic extends far beyond Nicaragua. It’s prevalent along the Pacific coast of Central America – across six countries.

“It is important that the chronic kidney disease (CKD) afflicting thousands of rural workers in Central America be recognized as what it is – a major epidemic with a tremendous population impact,” says Victor Penchaszadeh, a clinical epidemiologist at Columbia University in the US. He is also a consultant to the Pan-American Health Organization on chronic diseases in Latin America.

El Salvador’s health minister recently called on the international community for help. She said the epidemic is “wasting away our populations.”

Heat stress

At a health clinic in El Salvador, in the farming region of Bajo Lempa, Dr. Carlos Orantes recently found that a quarter of the men in his area suffered from chronic kidney disease.

What’s more, he says, most of the men who are ill show no signs of high blood pressure or diabetes – the most common causes of CKD elsewhere in the world.

“Most of the men we studied have CKD from unknown causes,” he says.


What the men in the area have in common is they all work in farming. So Dr. Orantes thinks a major cause of their kidney damage is the toxic chemicals – pesticides and herbicides – that are routinely used here in agriculture.

“These chemicals are banned in the United States, Europe and Canada, and they’re used here, without any protection, and in large amounts that are very concerning,” he says.

But he’s not ready to rule out other possible causes. For instance, the overuse of painkillers can damage the kidneys, and so can drinking too much alcohol. Both are major problems here, he says.

In Nicaragua, the disease has become a political issue.

In 2006, the World Bank gave a loan to Nicaragua’s largest sugar company to build an ethanol plant. Plantation workers filed a complaint, saying the company’s working conditions and use of chemicals were fueling the epidemic. They said the loan violated the bank’s own standards for worker safety and environmental practices.

In response, the bank agreed to fund a study to try to identify the cause of the epidemic.

“The evidence points us most strongly to a hypothesis that heat stress might be a cause of this disease,” says Daniel Brooks of Boston University, who is leading the research.

His team has found it’s not just sugarcane workers who are falling ill. Miners and port workers also suffer high rates of kidney disease, yet they’re not exposed to farm chemicals. What these men have in common, he says, is they all work long hours in extreme heat.

“Day after day of hard manual labor in hot conditions – without sufficient replacement of fluids – could lead to effects on the kidney that are not obvious at first but over time accumulate to the point that it enters into a diseased state,” says Brooks.

“This has never been so far shown to cause chronic kidney disease, so we would be talking about a new mechanism that has not so far been described in the scientific literature.”

But Brooks says a new preliminary study bolsters this hypothesis. His team tested blood and urine from sugarcane workers who perform different jobs. The scientists found more evidence of kidney damage in the workers who have more strenuous jobs outside.

Professor Aurora Aragon of Nicaragua’s National University in Leon says this explanation makes sense. She’s long suspected that part of the problem is the way sugarcane workers are paid – receiving more money the more sugarcane they cut.

“This way of working forces people to do more than they are able to do, and this is not good for their health,” she says.

No alternative

“Working in the field made us feel dizzy and nauseous,” says Jose Donald Cortez, who cut sugarcane for 18 years. “We often had fevers.”

Cortez now has kidney disease and heads an organization of sugarcane workers in Nicaragua who are ill. He’s convinced that something on the sugar plantations is causing the sickness.

Whatever it is, he says, those who are ill need treatment with dialysis – which can keep them alive when their kidneys fail. But few can get it because dialysis is extremely expensive and rarely available.

“If you ask the ministry of health they say they don’t have the money. If you ask the sugar company if they are responsible, they say no.”

For their part, the sugarcane companies say they’re not convinced that farm chemicals or working conditions on their plantations are to blame for the epidemic. Still, they say, they are trying to protect their workers’ health.

One conglomerate that owns several sugar plantations in Central America – the Pellas Group – says it’s started giving workers an hour-long lunch break and now employs staff to make sure the men drink water. The company also routinely tests its workers’ kidney function.

Company spokesman Ariel Granera says if a worker is found to have kidney disease, he is let go – out of concern, says Granera, for the worker’s well-being.

But the sick workers who have been dismissed say what they receive from the companies and from social security isn’t enough to live on – and when they lose their jobs, they lose the right to be treated at company clinics.

In La Isla, and many other villages like it, the men often seek new employment with contractors who do not check for kidney disease yet send the men to work in the same sugarcane fields.

“There is no alternative,” says one woman who recently lost her father. “No other way to support a family.”


PRI’s The World looked into this story with the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ), a project of The Center for Public Integrity.

Learn how the United States promoted sugarcane production in Central America and resisted global attention to the CKD epidemic in this ICIJ story by reporters Sasha Chavkin and Ronnie Greene.

 

Discussion

57 comments for “Mystery Kidney Disease in Central America”

  • Anonymous

    Thank you so much for bringing this important issue to light.  

    -Jason Glaser, President and Co-Founder of La Isla Foundation.

  • Anonymous

    “At a United Nations summit of health ministers this
    February in Mexico City, El Salvador Health Minister Maria Isabel
    Rodriguez declared that chronic kidney disease was “wasting away our
    populations” across Central America. She called on fellow health
    ministers to include CKD among the top chronic illnesses in the
    Americas, a step that could attract U.N. funding for studies.Rodriguez’s proposal ran into strong opposition from the summit’s most powerful participant: the United States.” From Treehugger , a Discovery Co

    Rachel Cernansky

    Living / Health

    December 12, 2011

    • Anonymous

      The fact is that finding the cause will be the easy part compared to changing the policy creating the conditions causing the disease.  As we move forward on establishing cause we are also preparing investigations to demonstrate which actors are acting badly and what interests are enabling those actions. Thanks for your post!

    • negroamnte

      Why would they UN fight this when population reduction is their goal?

  • Anonymous

    I’m an American who lives in Mexico and know personally a man who is about 65 and
    a woman of 22 who have recently been diagnosed with kidney disease.  And I have
    heard of many other people suffering from this disease.  Something is going on here in
    Mexico too.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1378080377 Douglas Paul Sheehy

    When profit is the prime mover of a particular activity, it comes as no surprise that there would be a lack of sensitivity toward human suffering. To be of service to one another is a call to a life of joy. “I awoke and beheld that service was joy.” Tagore 

  • Anonymous

    I wonder whether other sugarcane producing areas are experiencing the same situation?  Cuba, Brazil, Dominican Republic, and many other countries also produce sugar from cane.  

  • Barbara Larcom

    I don’t know about La Isla, but I know that in northern rural Nicaragua they do have a test for leptospirosis, and the Ministry of Health also takes preventive measures as needed, such as during floods.  Your comment that leptospirosis might be a cause of the kidney disease is interesting, but according to the story, miners also get it.  So maybe not.

  • terry ngwafor

    ….this can be eradicated , sans the shadow of a doubt…thru The Power of THEIR Subconscious Mind………if and only if they know how to use it.No force of nature is evil; so the presumption that the heat is a likely culprit is very far fetched…..

  • Anonymous

    Thanks for this piece. One of the many you have done that I
    can’t imagine having heard anywhere else.

  • http://www.facebook.com/trent.nicolajsen Trent Nicolajsen

    yes they had this problem in ecuador 20 years ago, when the moon shine makers make alcahol from sugar cain there is a toxic byproduct called ethonal. it is very toxic to kidneys. and a lot of the distillers may use a lot of lead sodering, tin, copper, and even plastics. thus a very toxic poor quality alcahol and ethonal is made. it is a knowen fact that latin workers where also always given alcahol to there workers. usually when there is a ressesion the workers start drinking more alcahol as the only bonus.

  • Anonymous

    So, lets get this straight:-

    1) the World Bank loans money so that a company can use toxic chemicals around its workers

    2) Workers get kidney problems (part of the body’s de-tox system)

    3) the World Bank funds a “study” that determines the cause is heat stress despite admitting that if it was heat stress it would be happening through some hitherto unknown mechanism…

    Not the best “science” you;ll ever see that’s for sure… and probably not the best journalism either – remember you are allowed to question what you are reporting on, you don’t just have to write it down verbatim.

  • Andy D Kemp

    Dehydration and repetition of posture clamping down the spinal column in the regions on the nerve branches connected to the kindnies?

  • Jan Buladaco

    There is also sugar cane plantations here in the Philippines but I have never heard of this problem among the workers. As for the pesticides, insecticides, fungicides, and herbicides, we have the banana and pineapple plantations but workers do not get sick. Maybe lack of hydration and ethanol production are the culprit. 

    • http://www.facebook.com/people/Paul-Cohen/100003022357153 Paul Cohen

      inhale the week killers you use often and i bet you will get terribly sick, try it if you dare.

  • Christina Acevedo

    I would hope that in the future an independent study is done to determine the exact cause, identify if any shared genes possibly make these men predisposed, and to determine if this kidney disease is in any way different from what is traditionally seen. Maybe this would provide the opportunity for treatment as well.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Paul-Cohen/100003022357153 Paul Cohen

    any dummy could determine that all kinds of  illness come from the chemicals used in the business.  I have a degree on the chem subject.from Oxnard community college in Calif.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Paul-Cohen/100003022357153 Paul Cohen

    I worked as a manager for a landscape co. in Santa barbara from 72 to 74 I was the only one who could spray chems but i used lots of protection still think it affected me in a bad way well thats over.  But man just smell those chems and we know they are dangerous its the money man follow the money….                         The Usa always follows the money the hell with the people.

  • Anonymous

    I know a campesino family that lives not far from those sugar fields in NE Nicaragua. They say that every year, a sizeable number of workers die after the harvest. Large numbers of poor have moved to villages near the sugar fields. Now, they have no alternative to cutting cane, as there are no other jobs. One thing that worries the campesinos is that the fields are burned before the cutters come in. At night, you can see the glow of huge fires moving across the sky. The fires are spread by airplanes, the peasants say, and kill everything in their way, from python snakes to mice. They also say that part of the cane – the best part, they say, used for making rum – is harvested by machines. Why would “Nicaragua Sugar Estates” use machines for one part of the harvest, humans for another? Could it be that human labor is still cheaper? 

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Paul-Cohen/100003022357153 Paul Cohen

    OH by the way those sugar cane fields are owned and operated by By the UNITED states of good old America. and wages are set by the same.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Paul-Cohen/100003022357153 Paul Cohen

    take a whif of round up daily and see what happens

  • http://www.facebook.com/DataRules Jamie Powers

    When I heard this I was saddened by NPR’s lead-in essentially suggesting “Hard work can kill” 
    Why would hard work suddenly start killing us humans?  
    Those Egyptians did this with stuff and I recall no notable ‘die off.’
    So, why would hard work in a field with no water and a few powerful chemicals be harmful?  Precisely.
    And I’d love to see how/why the combined the ‘port workers’ data that allowed them to claim “See, it can’t be field chemicals because we found others….”
    Strikes me as a search for an alternative to looking at agricultural  chemical exposure
      
    Combine exhaustion, dehydration, add really strong chemicals and don’t forget hard exertion with associated deep breathing and you get what? I don’t know either.But I would never want anyone I care for to do such work for any length of time.And Bravo to Mr. Cohen:  Is it not just plain amazing that US researchers, paid by the World Bank, and researching the agricultural practices of American owned farms, would tend toward a finding that  ’hard work’ is the culprit here, and not possibly  (and I only offer possibly) chemical exposure.  

  • Anonymous

    Good Job Kate, Oviously this needs to be brought to the world’s attention. Someone is responsible and these suffering people need our help. I am so proud of you for your concern and dedication to people that wouldn’t have a voice otherwise.

  • Anonymous

    Good Job Kate, This is obiously an issue that needs to be brought to the World’s attention. Somebody has to be a voice for people who have no power. It is wrong for so many young men to be dying and their employers  looking the other way. We are our “Brothers’ Keepers” and we should never forget that. We belong to a community of spirit. I love you, Kate Hannah!

  • http://profiles.google.com/oerganix Lilly Cooper

    The Pellas family and other ultrarich oligarchs in Nicaragua have been employing men in this way for generations without this outcome. Google kidney disease virus and get an education.

    • Arno van den Bos

      IRC is not a virus

  • Anonymous

    It is interesting that the killing effects of the toxic chemicals has been played down in the same way that it was with the bees.” Hive collapse” was the name given when virtually all the bees were wiped out by a mysterious disease. The fact that pesticides were killing the bees was strongly denied. 

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1378080377 Douglas Paul Sheehy

    I encourage and applaud the studies being done to determine the cause of CKD. However, there are reasonable, common sensical measures that could be employed now to enhance the health of the workers. Hydration , especially in an environment of heat and exertion, is a must. Perhaps chemical exposure is not the cause of CKD but minimal or no exposure, especially with some safety apparatus being worn, we KNOW to be a good thing. Good nutrition and balanced activity and rest is important. Aren’t these obvious facts.
            What are we here for. We have historical perspective from which to draw. Plantation style production has many harmful aspects to it for both the body and soul of human beings.
    Let’s not forget that. Let’s live in solutions. I know this may be naive, idealistic claptrap but what are my alternatives. Corporations are people too????????? Unconscious people?????
    Hey, as far as I can see, we are all in this together.

  • Anonymous

    This story refers to a complaint filed in 2008 by the Asociación Chichigalpa por la Vida (ASOCHIVIDA), with support from the Washington DC-based NGO, Center for International Environmental Law (CIEL). The complaint was filed with the Office of the Compliance Advisor Ombudsman (CAO), the independent complaints mechanism for projects financed by the private sector arm of the World Bank Group – the International Finance Corporation (IFC).  ASOCHIVIDA represents about 2,000 community members, including former Nicaragua Sugar Estates Limited (NSEL) workers affected by chronic kidney disease. NSEL is a Nicaraguan company and a client of IFC.

    Representatives of ASOCHIVIDA and NSEL meet regularly at a dialogue table convened by the CAO. Medical needs, in particular identifying the cause of CKD and how to help affected community members, have been front and center in the dialogue. ASOCHIVIDA and NSEL jointly chose a research team from the Boston University School of Public Health to conduct an independent investigation into the causes of the disease –  a study that builds on the research of other investigators working to advance our understanding of this form of CKD. The research has considered all possible causes of CKD, including chemicals used in sugar and other agricultural production.

    More information on this case is available on the CAO’s Web site at: www.cao-ombudsman.org, including a communique about the case, which is accessible at http://www.cao-ombudsman.org/cases/document-links/documents/Communique_NSEL_042011.pdf   

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100002278976770 Joao Carlos Biernat

    I think that an independent study , including   HISTOLOGICS ANALYSIS  by  kidney  biopsies and  immunological  and  toxicologic  studies  of the renal tissue , can solved  this  enigma .More profound nephrological evaluation is need to propose a preventive treatment of this new (  ? )  disease . The use  of  methanol (  methilic  alcohol ) cause acute  , toxic  renal failure but seems  that cases are from chronical , slow  evolution.
    Here in Brasil there is not descriptions  of  similar cases in very hot regions as Pernambuco , Alagoas  or in São Paulo that use manual  workers in sugarcane  plantation.

  • Anonymous

    Watch the documentary BANANAS!  Why did Dole push extremely hard to stop the presentations of this movie?  Why does Dole sell a chemical for use in Nicaragua sugar cane production that is banned in the US of A?  Why does the Pellas conglomerate use the chemical when workers are walking in it in the fields?  For money!  Pellas is an extremely rich company and has the resources to determine what is happening.  The companies leaders do not care if poor workers have a disease; kidney failure, and die.  Very simple.  Greed…. get the work done as cheaply and easily as possible; even if toxic chemicals which are not allowed to be used in much of the world kills people.

  • http://ex360.wordpress.com/ ex360

    Are we discussing all the chemicals that filter to the water these men have to drink because there are no other resources? Shouldn’t we be talking about mining companies and all the other big multinationals that make a profit out of weak underdeveloped countries where they can ignore their own laws?

  • Photo CS, L.L.C .

    I spent two months in Nicaragua covering the CKD epidemic, you can find more photos here: http://www.photocs.net/blog/travel/nicaragua/la-isla-foundation-nicaragua/

  • Photo CS, L.L.C .

    I spent two months in Nicaragua covering the CKD epidemic, you can find more photos here: http://www.photocs.net/blog/travel/nicaragua/la-isla-foundation-nicaragua/

  • Anonymous

    This carries the telltale sign of environmental exposure. Yes mine workers do not work in the sugarcane fields, but they eat and drink the same food/drink.
    If you work hard and sweat a lot, you have to compensate by drinking (water preferably) the same amount, chronic dehydration will not help ill kidneys and can potentially accelerate kidney diseases.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/박종인/100003272664374 박종인

    wow!~ I have already come!! surprise~!!http://youtu.be/zXKV78VERio

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/박종인/100003272664374 박종인

    wow!~ I have already come!! surprise~!!http://youtu.be/zXKV78VERio

  • Anonymous

    Este artículo es muy triste y desgarrador. La enfermedad de los riñones en América Central es un problema muy serio. Es sorprendente que esta enfermedad sea la segunda causa de muerte en El Salvador. La mayoría de los hombres que trabajan en los campos de caña de azúcar mueren a causa de la enfermedad de los riñones . Esta epidemia tiene un impacto enorme en la población. Algunos médicos creen que la enfermedad es un resulto de productos químicos tóxicos.  Sin embargo, otros médicos creen que la enfermedad es causada por el estrés de calor. En la clase de salud este año, aprendí que la gente debe beber mucha agua y tomar descansos si está trabajando fuera en el calor durante mucho tiempo. Sin embargo, estos hombres ya están afectados por la enfermedad. Es una situación difícil porque los hombres necesitan dinero, pero también necesitan una vida sana. La diálisis puede ayudar a sus riñones, pero es muy caro. Espero que los médicos puedan ayudar a estos hombres en América Central.

  • Anonymous

    I think it’s really sad that the people who are ill cannot get the help that they need. I also think it’s unfortunate that there really are no other jobs for them to take. Their only option is working in the sugarcane fields, where they know they will get sick and eventually die. Knowing that at such a young age is horrible. I don’t think it’s right that doctors won’t help them and the sugarcane company won’t either. It really hows you how different things are in America and how lucky we are. Although alcohol and pain killers are a problem there, they are also a problem here, but people aren’t dying as quickly from it as they are. Someone should help the people of La Isla.

  • Anonymous

    Pues, no es una sorpresa que estas companias estan tomando ventaja de estes trabajadores. No hay muchos occupaciones en estes paises, asi tienen que trabajar horas largas para pisto demasiado pequeno. Es una buena idea para tener clinicas de salud para los trabajadores, pero las companias disparan los empleados enfermos, como dice Granera. Debe ser un cambio en como los empleados y las companias trabajan juntos. Y el Banco Mundial no esta ayudando el problema, porque construyo una fabrica de etanol. Solo exacerba el asunto.

  • Anonymous

    Este artículo es muy triste y causa una gran preocupación para las personas que trabajan en el calor todos los días en el Central de América. Creo que los trabajadores deben recibir muchas formas de tratamiento si caen enfermos, también deben recibir formas de tratamiento para evitar enfermos. Es triste que algunos de estos trabajadores también acepten lo que podrían morir a causa de todo el trabajo que hacen con los productos químicos que no están permitidos en algunos países. No es justo que un trabajador deba ser despedido si enferman porque ahora no tienen una forma de pagar por un tratamiento posible. Creo que el gobierno deba intervenir más en esta situación para beneficiar los trabajadores y la familia del trabajador. En mi opinión, demuestra mucho coraje y el honor de que estas personas siguen trabajando porque saben que es la única manera de mantener a su familia en este momento en el tiempo, incluso si eso significa que se puso muy enfermo.

  • Anonymous

    It is so scary that a “mysterious” epidemic in Central America. I feel so bad for the people who are sick and can not get help. Its so sad because in America you can go to a hospital and get help. I feel terrible that in Central America there are no jobs for the men to work except in the sugarcane fields. It is sad that the men who have to work in the sugarcane fields know they will get sick, with kidney disease and die. It is strange that they do not understand why these men are recieving kidney disease. This is a problem in Central America that needs to be noticed and the people need to be helped as soon as possible. We help others, i believe we should help them too.

  • Anonymous

    Pienso que el gobierno deberia ayudar los trabajadores.  No es situacion facil para fijando, pero los funcionarios necesitan actuar.  Si la problema no se puede corregida, el gobierno deberia considerar invertiendo en un programa para dialysis.  Simplemente educando la gente de central america de los riesgos podria mejorar las estadisticas…todavia, estas personas necestian trabajar, y a veces en paises como estos no alternativo existir. 

  • Anonymous

    Este artículo es muy triste y terrible. Me deploro que los hombres en los países americanos centrales tengan que trabajar en los campos de azúcar para ganar dinero, pero el trabajo está matándolos. Es un círculo vicioso; tienen que trabajar para vivir, pero si ellos trabajan en los campos, sus riñones fallan. Las compañías de la azúcar son despreciables; los productos químicos que se usan en los campos son peligrosos, y las horas de trabajar son largas y difíciles. Los dos pueden contribuir a fracaso de riñón. Afecta muchos hombres en seis países en la América Central, y es el segundo causo de muerto. Ojalá que los científicos encuentren un solución a la problema muy pronto.

  • Anonymous

    Este artículo es muy triste.  Pienso que el gobierno debe ayudar los trabajadores y dar atención medica cuando este es necesario.  Es similar en los estados unidos, la gente que necesitan más atención y ayuda no tiene trabajas y también no tiene cobertura médica.  Sin trabajo, no las personas no tienen dinero para pagar las doctoras para el cuidado. Es muy, muy triste.  Es un problema en todas de los países que no tienen cobertura médica universal.  Quiero ayudar a las personas que están enfermos y necesitan ayuda pero no tengo los recursos para ayudar.  En los países en América del Sur, este problema es muy común y el gobierno necesita reconocerlo y ayudar la gente.

  • Anonymous

    I think that it is very sad to see all the people getting sick and not being able to get treated for it.  It is crazy because in america we have a lot of things that cure certain things and we could help them if we really tried.  it is very werid that the men get kindney disease from working in the sugarcane fields.  That must be a terrible feeling know that the place you work will eventually get you sick and you will die.  I think that the Untied States needs to see this problem and we need to help them out.

  • Anonymous

    I that this article is very sad. It’s also scary not knowing exactly what is causing this many kidney failures. This is something researchers should work on more and make it a primary thing because it’s so dangerous and nerve racking that ones kidneys could fail at any moment. It’s also sad that there is no other way to support a family but work in sugarcane fields and mines because if it is the heat causing this, that is a huge problem.

  • Anonymous

    I think that this is a scary thing. everyone should have the access to a doctor or dialysis. its also scary that no one knows where this is exactly coming from. people in America take advantage of the fact that we have the best doctor’s and treatment and when we need it we have it. I think people should take a second look at how other countries live. back to the article, its scary that at any moment you could lose a loved one.

  • Anonymous

    wow! Esto es muy grave y deben encontrar un solucion, pero ya! Es muy importante que la poblacion de todo el mundo este a salvo. Me parece muy raro que no encuentren una causa concreta, talvez tiene que ver con el clima del lugra o incluso talvez sea genetica, no lo se, podria ser cualquier cosa. Las enfermedades a los rinones son demasiado graves, y los tratamientos muy caros, asi que estas personas en realidad no tienen mucha opcion, porque tampoco pueden dejar de trabajar. Yo creo que otras organizaciones como la ONU o UNICEF podrian ayudar a estas personas. 

  • Anonymous

    This is really sad, all these people are getting sick and there is nothing they can do about it. It’s especially sad to know that when you get the disease, you know that in a month you may be dead. Also, for all the men working in the sugarcane fields and all the other people who work long hours in hot weather its scary for them because they know that they could get this disease just by working, but they need to work in order to support themselves. Its very sad that there is no cure for this, and that the only treatment they have is too expensive for anyone with the disease to afford. I think that we need to find a way to help these people who need the treatment.

  • Anonymous

    The chronic kidney failure seems to be caused by a nephrotoxic agent used in these regions acentuated by an almost constant dehydration state damaging further more the renal tissue as the present studies are trying to probe. Bleacher Seats

  • abdullah alharari

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  • abdullah alharari

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  • abdullah alharari

    have a solution 4 CKD call 251 912 23 44 75