Have they ever given you Kayexalate Duane? That's what I took before dialysis, and not eating, brought mine down to a normal range. It tastes gross and will have ya running for the bathroom, but it brings down your potassium right away.
I think he is talking about his Phosphorus Chicken Little. But i have had that stuff, it is the gritty stuff that is like sand when you drink it? Man-o-man if it is, that stuff had me running allright, except 1/2 the time i didnt make it Thank God i was in the hospital and didnt have to clean it
Quote from: goofynina on April 20, 2007, 07:05:01 PMI think he is talking about his Phosphorus Chicken Little. But i have had that stuff, it is the gritty stuff that is like sand when you drink it? Man-o-man if it is, that stuff had me running allright, except 1/2 the time i didnt make it Thank God i was in the hospital and didnt have to clean it Oh, yeah. Kayexalate is for the other P word.
I also have a high pth (800).
Quote from: mmmmdeedee on April 17, 2007, 06:30:43 PM I also have a high pth (800). Ideal pth should be around (300), phosphorus should be around 5.5you are in the danger zone at 800.A phosphorus food finder guide would teach you what to eat daily.
Whenever patients are blamed for bad blood chemistry results, I feel they should point out that the real blame belongs with the medical profession for having provided such an utterly inadequate treatment as hemodialysis and pd, since these are not able to permit people to live normally, or even to control their blood values with a strict diet. It is also standard practice in medicine to blame the patient for not taking the medicine prescribed rather than call into question the omnipotent wisdom of the drug companies and the doctors in providing the medicine. I remember seeing every single patient at a glaucoma clinic in 1978 being blamed for not taking their eyedrops because their intra-ocular pressures were rising over time, but only later was it discovered that the drug prescribed lost its effectiveness over time! No apology was ever given to the patients for the scolding they had received.My dialysis unit had a summer camp providing holidays for dialysis patients, and at the camp they were constantly fed hot dogs, even though these are very high in phosphorus. "Oh well, we just found anything else too difficult to prepare," was the excuse they gave when I complained. So I have to wonder, why is it all right for the institution to become lax about the diet but not the patient? They obviously find it harder even institutionally to comply with a regimen they expect us to endure as individuals.
It really is a battle, isn't it!?!