Mid Atlantic Nephrology Associates in Baltimore: Kidney-Focused Practice with Multiple Office Locations
Mid Atlantic Nephrology Associates is a private nephrology practice treating chronic kidney disease, dialysis management, hypertension, and electrolyte disorders across four Baltimore-area office locations. The practice combines inpatient hospital consultations with outpatient chronic disease management, serving both newly referred and long-term kidney patients through affiliated physicians.
What the practice handles
The practice manages the full range of kidney conditions: chronic kidney disease stages 1 through 5, acute kidney injury consultations, hypertension in the context of renal disease, mineral and bone disorders, and pre-emptive living donor transplant evaluations. It also oversees dialysis patients—both hemodialysis and peritoneal dialysis—and coordinates care with dialysis centers. Transplant follow-up and immunosuppression management fall within scope, though the practice does not perform transplant surgery.
The practice holds admitting privileges at major Baltimore hospitals, meaning nephrologists see inpatients for acute kidney problems and can manage hospitalized patients under the care of other services. This matters if you develop sudden kidney function changes or are admitted for another condition; your nephrologist can monitor and guide kidney-specific decisions without a separate consultation.
Locations, hours, and appointment process
The practice operates offices in Towson, Lutherville, Glen Burnie, and Annapolis. Towson and Lutherville are the main sites. Office hours typically run 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. weekdays; verify current hours by phone before your first appointment, as hours occasionally shift seasonally. The practice accepts new patients through primary-care referrals and accepts most major insurance plans including Medicare Advantage and commercial plans; call the main office to confirm coverage for your plan before scheduling.
New-patient appointments usually occur within 2 to 4 weeks. Bring a list of current medications, recent lab results (particularly creatinine and GFR), and any dialysis records if applicable. If you have an urgent issue (sudden swelling, severe shortness of breath, or dramatic changes in urine output), call ahead to flag it as urgent rather than waiting for a routine opening; the office can sometimes accommodate same-week visits.
How to decide between Mid Atlantic Nephrology and other Baltimore nephrologists
The Baltimore nephrology landscape includes several options: University of Maryland Medical Center's affiliated nephrology group (part of a larger academic health system), Johns Hopkins Nephrology, independent nephrologists, and federally qualified health centers in West Baltimore that provide nephrology on a sliding-fee basis.
Choose Mid Atlantic Nephrology if you want continuity with a single private practice, prefer outpatient-focused management, and are insured (they bill commercial insurance, Medicare, and Medicaid). The multi-location footprint suits patients in Towson, Lutherville, Glen Burnie, and northern Anne Arundel County who want to avoid traveling downtown.
Choose Johns Hopkins Nephrology if you need specialized services: living-donor kidney paired-exchange programs, complex immunology cases, or research-trial access. Johns Hopkins also manages more advanced transplant immunosuppression and has in-house expertise for rare inherited kidney diseases.
Choose University of Maryland Nephrology if you are already established within the UM system or need coordinated care with another UM specialty (e.g., you have both kidney disease and a complex endocrine condition managed at UM).
Choose a federally qualified health center (such as FQHCs in West Baltimore) if cost is the primary concern and you lack insurance or have limited income. These centers provide nephrology consultations on a sliding-fee scale, though appointment availability is longer and the scope is typically limited to common chronic kidney disease rather than complex cases.
What to expect at your first visit
The initial appointment lasts 45 minutes to an hour. The nephrologist will review your kidney history, past lab results, blood pressure trends, and any previous treatments (medications, dialysis, or transplant). Bring a list of all medications you take and the reasons for them—many drugs worsen kidney function or require dose adjustment as kidneys fail.
The exam focuses on signs of fluid overload (swelling in the legs or lungs), blood pressure (elevated BP accelerates kidney decline), and any findings specific to your diagnosis (e.g., signs of diabetic complications if diabetes caused your kidney disease). You will likely have basic lab work drawn on-site or ordered to establish baseline kidney function and electrolytes.
Subsequent visits occur every 3 months for stable chronic kidney disease, monthly for dialysis patients, and more frequently if your condition is changing. Most visits are 20 to 30 minutes. The nephrologist will review labs, adjust medications, and discuss dietary changes (sodium, potassium, phosphorus restriction depends on your stage).
Insurance, costs, and payment
The practice accepts Medicare, Medicaid, and most commercial insurance plans. If uninsured or underinsured, ask about the financial counselor; many offices offer discounts for cash-pay visits or can direct you to assistance programs. A typical office visit copay is $20 to $50 for insured patients; dialysis management or complex cases may trigger higher specialist copays. Verify your plan's coverage before the first appointment.
Lab work and imaging (ultrasound, CT) are billed separately and depend on your insurance deductible and out-of-pocket maximum. Dialysis patients may have additional costs managed through their dialysis center's billing rather than the nephrology office directly.
Who this practice suits and who it does not
This practice is a good fit for employed or insured patients with chronic kidney disease who value continuity of care and a private-practice model. Patients in the Towson, Lutherville, Glen Burnie area who want to avoid Baltimore's downtown traffic will appreciate the location options. Established dialysis patients also benefit from the practice's dialysis-center relationships.
It is not ideal if you are uninsured and cost is prohibitive, or if you need transplant surgery (referral is handled, but surgery occurs at a transplant center). It may also not be the right fit if you require intensive in-hospital nephrology management; Johns Hopkins and UM manage more severely ill inpatients.
Mid Atlantic Nephrology Associates fills a practical role in Baltimore's nephrology network: stable, accessible chronic kidney disease care for insured patients in the northern suburbs, with sufficient scope to manage dialysis and simple transplant follow-up without requiring a downtown health system.

