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« on: May 11, 2010, 01:35:50 PM » |
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Battling kidney disease
Organizations, businesses join to raise money for kids with kidney disease
BY BRIAN PASSEY • bpassey@thespectrum.com • May 10, 2010
Kidney disease can drastically alter the lives of those who struggle with it. At its most extreme stage, the disease requires dialysis treatments a few times a week for hours at a time to replicate the job normally done by functioning kidneys.
That why a few local organizations and businesses have joined together to sponsor a Poker Run this Saturday to raise money a camp for children with kidney disease.
Sue Musto, a local representative for the Utah Kidney Foundation, says it helps the children feel normal because they are around others who face the same challenges.
There are a variety of factors that can lead to kidney disease, says Dr. Carlos Mercado, medical director at Liberty Dialysis Center in St. George. The most common causes are diabetes or hypertension.
Less common are infections that may limit or eliminate kidney function. That's what happened to Jeane Taylor.
It began with a simple ovarian cyst but the resulting complications almost killed Jeane.
The cyst became so heavy it tore a tube connected to the ovary, preventing blood flow to the organ. Soon an infection was releasing toxins into her bloodstream.
"My body just started shutting down," Jeane says.
Doctors administered a medication that saved Jeane's life by continuing the blood flow to her vital organs, but complications led to the amputation of her fingers and lower legs.
The drug also limited the blood flow to her kidneys. She says her doctors though she would regain the use of her kidneys but they eventually shut down and in January of 2009 she began hemodialysis, the most common form of dialysis where blood is removed from the patient, moved through a filter where it is cleaned of toxins and waste products, then returned to the patient's body.
"I was scared to death finding out my wife was going to have to go on dialysis," says Jeane's husband, Tony.
At first the dialysis was difficult for her. She would become nauseated and vomit. Now after more than a year on dialysis she mostly just feels run-down after treatments.
Jeane remained hospitalized in Salt Lake City for most of 2009 and even stayed up north with her parents for a time after she was released while she attended various follow-up appointments with doctors. She only recently returned to her family in St. George where she is the mother of two young boys, ages 5 and 7.
"They are my heroes through all of this, honestly," she says of her boys.
They didn't even care the first time they saw her hands without fingers.
"They thought it was kind of cool that she would get a robot hand and robot leg," Tony says.
Jeane has been using prosthetic legs to walk and recently five students from Brigham Young Advertisement University fashioned a prosthetic hand-like device that allows her to clamp down on objects like utensils so she can eat.
Tony and Jeane say the boys did struggle somewhat with a sense of abandonment as their mother was in the hospital and their father often traveled to be with her while they stayed with family members.
Yet the boys bonded and learned to look out for each other.
"They really think about each other now," Tony says.
It's one of the many blessings the family has found among the challenges.
"There's a lot to live for," Jeane says. "We're pretty happy now."
Peritoneal dialysis
Life is about to become much easier for the Taylor family..
Up until last week, Jeane and Tony were still waking early every Monday, Wednesday and Friday to travel to Liberty Dialysis Center for her hemodialysis treatments. The early morning trips prevented Tony from starting his work as an elevator and escalator repairman until later in the day, meaning he arrived home from work later.
Because Jeane is slowly relearning how to do everyday tasks like cooking and cleaning without her fingers and lower legs, many of those responsibilities have fallen to Tony as well.
"She still does a lot but it takes her about four times as long to do anything," he says.
On Thursday, though, the couple went to Liberty Dialysis to be trained for peritoneal dialysis, which utilizes an abdominal catheter to insert a solution that cleans the blood inside the body nightly while the patient sleeps.
"It replicates the kidney function," says Erma Rainey, a register nurse at Liberty Dialysis.
Richard Eaton, manager at Liberty Dialysis, says peritoneal dialysis is also gentler on the heart. However some people are unable to do this type of dialysis because of surgeries or infections. Others simply don't want to have to worry about doing it nightly.
For Tony, however, it's easier on him to learn how to operate the machinery for his wife.
"This way we'll be able to put her on at night and I'll be able to take her off in the morning and head to work," he says. "She doesn't even have to wake up."
They would have made the switch from hemodialysis to peritoneal dialysis earlier but Tony says they were trying to save one of his wife's remaining feet. Eventually it had to be amputated as well and now she is in good enough health that they are able to do the nightly dialysis.
From Tony's point of view, his wife has come a long way from when doctors were telling him she probably wouldn't make it and nurses avoided talking to him because they didn't know what to say.
"You're just grateful for every little moment because it can change so quickly," he says. "I thought I was going to be raising two little boys as a single dad."
Treatment and prevention
While a blood infection like Jeane faced may not be avoided. Mercado says there are steps people can take to ward off kidney disease or to catch it in the early stages before it worsens. Advertisement
"Awareness, awareness, awareness!" he emphasizes.
Most people don't even think about their kidneys until they have a problem with them. Yet many are likely in the first of the five stages of kidney disease and don't even realize it, Mercado says.
It is important to have regular doctor's visits. If detected early, Mercado says it is possible patients will never face dialysis or the need for a kidney transplant.
It's also important to maintain a healthy blood pressure and to avoid the excess uses of anti- inflammatory medications.
Besides the problems of kidney disease itself, Mercado says it can also affect other organs like the heart.
If kidney disease reaches the final stage, dialysis is necessary. However, dialysis is more like patching up the problem rather than fixing it.
"Our goal is to keep them on dialysis as a bridge until we're able to get them a kidney," Mercado says. "We have a high rate of transplants here."
That's the stage Jeane has arrived at. She's ready for a transplant but she still has to find a donor to match her. Many family members and friends are willing to donate a kidney to her but they still have to determine if any of them are a match. If not, she'll be added to a list of those waiting for a transplant.
Until that time, Jeane is simply enjoying the silver linings to the dark clouds of the last 17 months. Tony admires his wife's outlook.
"I'd like to think I would be as strong as she was but I don't know that I would," he says.
Among the blessings were the BYU students who spent so much time developing the prosthetic hand for her.
Jeane says she also treasures the relationships she's developed with the staff at Liberty Dialysis, calling them "genuine."
The Taylors say the ordeal has helped them to be grateful for everything they have. They see things differently now.
"We are probably actually happier than 90 percent of the population that has money and all of their appendages," Jeane says. "This has actually been a tremendous blessing in our lives."
Those are the same kind of feelings the Youth Transplant Camp is designed to bring to the children ages 8 to 17 who attend it. That's why Liberty Dialysis Center and Zion Harley-Davidson are among those sponsoring the Poker Run event this Saturday to benefit the camp.
"They never turn any kid away," Musto says. "There's no camp like it throughout the United States."
All motorcycles or cars are welcome to join. Registration is from 9 to 10:30 a.m. Saturday at Zion Harley-Davidson, 2345 N. Coral Canyon Blvd., Washington City. There will be live music at noon and a drawing with prizes.
Advertisement If You Go
What: Poker Run to benefit Youth Transplant Kamp.
When: Saturday; registration from 9 to 10:30 a.m.
Where: Zion Harley-Davidson, 2345 N. Coral Canyon Blvd., Washington City.
For More Information: Call 673-5100 or visit www. zionhd.com.
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