to Corey--"being a man" for surgery is not about being afraid of surgeries--if you read my post I almost died--they often slow down the blood flow for surgeries and that caused a blood clot and that could happen again for major surgery like a transplant--but thanks for your info--to Jeannea-what "scared" me is the ideal of going thru this and it may not last or my system may still reject it-expensive drugs and endless doctor visits don't appeal to me as well-I don't know how much Medicare or insurance will cover--don't want to go broke for this--it sounds like a lot of trouble and a lot of expense for too many maybes
If you have had clotting problems in a previous surgery, a transplant center would want to know about this so that they could have drugs on hand should this happen during transplant surgery (or any surgery, for that matter).
If you are concerned about the cost of immunosuppressants, this is something that you can check with your insurance company about beforehand. All transplant hospitals have a financial services department; part of the pre-transplant workup covers information about the financial side of transplant. Believe me, you won't be listed if you cannot pay. You can go to Medicare's website where there is information specifically about how they cover dialysis/ESRD/transplant.
With my insurance plus the fact that all of my tx prescriptions are generic, my out of pocket costs are $45 per month.
Of course your hospital will talk to you about rejection and other possible adverse occurrences; it would be remiss of them not to. I can't imagine any hospital, though, that wouldn't tell you how they would treat you should rejection occur. It's the most fundamental issue that any tx center will discuss with a potential recipient.
The only time you'd be having weekly labs would be in the first month or so post-tx. I certainly didn't see a doctor weekly! I'm two and a half years post tx, and I see my transplant nephrologist once a year. I get monthly labs and will do so during the life of this kidney, but that's just part of it.
Yes, your immune system will be "compromised", but not to the point where you will be infected by every microbe that comes along. I've had one cold in the past two and a half years, and it really lasted only 3 days. When you get your monthly labs done, you will see your white blood cell count, so you can monitor the degree to which your immune system is suppressed. My WBC is normal.
Good luck to you!