That headline is overstated and a bit misleading. High Creatinine isn’t a disease itself—it’s a lab marker that helps assess kidney function. When it rises, it can point to problems like Chronic kidney disease, but there usually aren’t “12 specific silent symptoms” tied only to creatinine.
🧠 Why it’s called “silent”
Early kidney issues often have few or no symptoms. That’s why blood tests (including creatinine) are important.
⚠️ Symptoms that can appear as kidney function worsens
These are general signs of kidney problems, not “creatinine symptoms” specifically:
- Fatigue or weakness
- Swelling in legs, ankles, or around eyes
- Changes in urination (more, less, foamy, or dark urine)
- Shortness of breath (fluid buildup)
- Nausea or loss of appetite
- Muscle cramps
- Itchy skin
- Trouble concentrating
- High blood pressure
👉 These usually show up later, not early.
🔍 What actually raises creatinine
- Kidney disease or damage
- Dehydration
- Certain medications
- High muscle mass or intense exercise (temporary rise)
❌ Why the headline is misleading
- There aren’t “12 unique hidden symptoms” doctors ignore
- Doctors rely on lab tests, not symptoms alone
- It suggests neglect, which isn’t accurate—kidney disease is just often quiet early on
🛡️ What you can do
- Stay hydrated
- Manage blood pressure and blood sugar
- Avoid unnecessary painkillers (like frequent NSAIDs)
- Get routine blood tests if at risk
🧾 Bottom line
High creatinine is a warning sign on a lab test, not a list of symptoms. Kidney issues can be silent early, which is why regular testing matters more than chasing “hidden signs.”
If you have a creatinine value or lab report, share it—I can help you understand what it actually means.