Creatinine, urea, electrolytes — kidney health.
An RFT looks at how well your kidneys are filtering waste out of the blood. It measures creatinine and urea (waste products that build up if kidneys are slow), plus electrolytes like sodium and potassium that the kidneys keep in balance.
Kidneys lose function silently — you can lose half your kidney capacity before noticing anything. People with diabetes or high blood pressure are at the highest risk, and a yearly RFT catches damage early enough to slow it down.
No fasting required. Drink water normally. If you take blood-pressure or diabetes medicines, take them as usual unless your doctor says otherwise.
Price (MRP)
NPR 1,000
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