Nerbass F.B., Pecoits-Filho R., Clark W.F., Sontrop J.M., McIntyre C.W., Moist L.
(2017), Occupational Heat Stress and Kidney Health: From Farms to Factories,
Kidney International Reports, 2 (6), pp. 998-1008.
Why Heat Stress Damages Kidneys
When workers are out in extreme heat for long stretches, their bodies react in ways that directly hurt their kidneys. The main problem is repeated dehydration. This cuts off blood flow to the kidneys, causing acute kidney injury (AKI). Each AKI episode scars the kidney tissue, slowly leading to Chronic Kidney Disease of unknown origin (CKDu). We’ve seen this in sugarcane workers in Central America, rice farmers in Sri Lanka, and factory workers across South Asia.
Studies show that outdoor workers under heat stress have higher levels of creatinine, cystatin C, and kidney injury molecule-1 (KIM-1 by the end of their shifts. These are all signs of kidney stress. The damage gets worse when workers drink sugary drinks, alcohol, or anything with fructose instead of clean water. These drinks stop nitric oxide production in the kidney and speed up uric acid formation, making the kidney damage worse.
Employers in industrial and agricultural settings, especially in hot areas, have a clear responsibility to give their workers clean, drinkable water on-site. Portable reverse osmosis (RO) systems are practical solutions for remote job sites. AMPAC USA designs and builds solar-powered RO units that can make thousands of gallons of clean drinking water every day. They can use groundwater, surface water, or even brackish water, tackling the root cause of occupational CKD risk.
AMPAC USA engineers custom water purification systems for commercial, industrial, and emergency applications — from 500 GPD to multi-million GPD. Trusted by municipalities, military, and industry worldwide.
