While I was waiting for a prescription at a local chemist, struck up a conversation with guy next to me. Gave him my story and it turns out that he works a s surgeon at Royal Perth Hospital. He related that in the last month he has thrown away 14 kidneys. I nearly cried.
There's a chart I found in a link on this blog post from IHD member Bill Peckham. For me, a 25-year-old male on hemodialysis, the expected remaining lifespan is 13.2 years, meaning it's expected I'll die before I hit 40 if I stay on hemodialysis (given average statistics - it helps a lot that I'm relatively healthy aside from my kidneys, so I'd probably outlive that estimate). If I have a transplant, the remaining expected lifespan goes up to 33.5 years. If I were healthy, it would be 49.3 years.That's how much dialysis can take from your life expectancy.
Quote from: murf on November 18, 2010, 06:32:56 PM This might sound morbid, but if you have a cancer you get treated and either it works and you go into remission or if it doesn't, you pass away. Dialysis patients are in Limbo/purgatory. The disease just never goes away. No determination. Don't get me wrong. I feel very much for cancer patients and their treatment is horrendous but there is some sort of finality. The greatest frustration with dialysis patients is that it just never ends.I have two friends, (both former workmates) who have cancer. Both have suffered terribly over the years, including from chemotherapy. Both will die shortly.They would trade places with you or me in a heartbeat.
This might sound morbid, but if you have a cancer you get treated and either it works and you go into remission or if it doesn't, you pass away. Dialysis patients are in Limbo/purgatory. The disease just never goes away. No determination. Don't get me wrong. I feel very much for cancer patients and their treatment is horrendous but there is some sort of finality. The greatest frustration with dialysis patients is that it just never ends.
Get shot by an enraged husband whose wife I have just seduced?