High Creatinine — Valencia Kidney Specialist
High creatinine explained by Dr. Villaro, nephrologist in Valencia. Acute vs chronic elevation, eGFR, causes and next steps. Book a consultation.
What does a high creatinine level mean?
Creatinine is a waste product made by your muscles and removed from the blood by the kidneys. Because the kidneys are responsible for clearing it, the blood creatinine level acts as a window onto kidney function: when filtering falls, creatinine rises. A raised value on a blood test is therefore one of the most common reasons people are referred to a nephrologist.
A single high reading, however, is not a diagnosis. Creatinine is influenced by muscle mass, hydration, diet and medication, so the figure must always be interpreted in context — and over time.
Acute versus chronic elevation
The most important first question is whether the rise is acute or chronic:
- Acute elevation develops over hours to days. It often reflects a sudden, potentially reversible stress on the kidneys — dehydration, a severe infection, a blockage in the urinary tract, or a medication. This is acute kidney injury, and prompt assessment can frequently reverse it.
- Chronic elevation develops over months or years and usually reflects gradual, structural kidney damage, as seen in chronic kidney disease from diabetes or high blood pressure.
Telling these apart shapes the urgency and the entire plan, which is why your nephrologist will always ask for previous results.
Common causes
A high creatinine can stem from causes that are largely reversible or from established disease:
- Dehydration — perhaps the most common temporary cause, reducing blood flow to the kidneys.
- Medications — certain painkillers, some blood-pressure drugs and contrast dyes.
- Urinary obstruction — from stones or an enlarged prostate.
- Structural kidney disease — diabetic nephropathy, hypertensive damage or glomerulonephritis.
The clinical picture, urine tests and imaging help separate a passing dehydration spike from genuine kidney damage.
Why trending over time matters
No number in nephrology is more meaningful than the trend. A creatinine of a given value means something very different if it has been stable for years versus if it has doubled in a month. By comparing current and past results, your nephrologist can judge whether kidney function is stable, slowly declining or acutely deteriorating — and act accordingly. This is why keeping copies of your old blood tests is so valuable, especially for expats whose records may sit in another country.
eGFR versus creatinine
While creatinine is measured directly, eGFR (estimated glomerular filtration rate) is calculated from it, adjusted for age and sex, and expresses kidney function as a percentage of normal. eGFR is generally the more reliable guide and is used to stage chronic kidney disease. A creatinine that looks only mildly raised can correspond to a significantly reduced eGFR, particularly in older or smaller patients.
What a nephrologist does next
The next steps are systematic:
- Repeat the blood test to confirm the elevation and establish a trend.
- Check the urine for protein and blood, which point to the underlying cause.
- Review medications that may be contributing.
- Arrange a kidney ultrasound to assess size and rule out obstruction.
- Measure blood pressure and screen for diabetes.
From there, a clear diagnosis and management plan follow. If you have been told your creatinine is high, an early assessment with Dr. Juan Luis Villaro Gumpert at Hospital Vithas 9 de Octubre in Valencia — available in English and Spanish — can determine whether it is a passing change or something that needs ongoing care.
Related conditions
Frequently asked questions
Does a single high creatinine result mean I have kidney disease?
What is the difference between creatinine and eGFR?
Can a high creatinine level come back down?
Book your consultation
Dr. Villaro sees patients every Thursday at Hospital Vithas 9 de Octubre in Valencia. English spoken.
Thursdays 16:30–20:30 at Hospital Vithas 9 de Octubre, Valencia
Written & reviewed by
Dr. Juan Luis Villaro Gumpert
Nephrologist with 40+ years of experience. Doctor Cum Laude, University of Navarra. Medical registration nº 13402
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