Hello all,
I have been lurking about these forums for the past few weeks just
soaking up all of the information and interesting stories everyone
here shares. I have decided that some of you might want to hear my
story (or maybe not
). So, here we go...
My name is Matt. I am a 22 year old college student from
Pennsylvania. Six months ago I decided to go to the hospital after
about a week of not feeling well (very weak, tired). The onset of
difficulty breathing was the kicker that made me decide to go. After
sitting in the ER for several hours I was about to be sent home with
the diagnosis of mild pneumonia. A nurse then rushed in and informed
me that they had looked at the wrong x-ray and my blood tests were
indicating kidney failure. The correct x-ray showed my lungs full of
blood. Admission ensued. The next morning, the neph said he had no
idea what was wrong with me and that he was transferring me to his main
hospital where the rest of his team was. Two days, a kidney biopsy
and 160mg of prednisone later, the head nehp (who is absolutely
awesome,) said "Hmmm, could be Goodpastures syndrome".
She was right on. They started dialysis, plasmapheresis, and continued
80 mg of prednisone per day. After a day or two I could could breath
again. My lungs responded extremely well, but I was left with two
busted up kidneys. After 13 days in the hospital, I returned home to
my parents house and began my thrice weekly dialysis adventure.
6 months later, I am living at school again and back to work. The
doctors said there was a chance albeit small that my kidneys would
recover. They have recovered a small amount, enough to do twice a
week, 3 hours 30mins per. Which is an amazing change from 3 a week, 4
hours.
I have my transplant eval in two weeks, as my neph has now decided
that anymore recovery is unlikely. I suppose it is possible, but we
decided I should be on the list (don't have a potential living donor at
the moment) in the mean time
.
Anyway, I may have gotten a little long winded with this, but I had
some time to kill (3 hours and 30 mins to be exact) and thought that
some here might want to hear this story.
I would be happy to share any more info that I may have missed.
Thanks for taking the time to read this.
-Matt P