If you have not had this type of BP drop before, chances are that the extra fluid you put on caused the BP drop. My experience has been that your body becomes used to the normal amount of fluid that you gain between treatments and major deviations from that can cause the fluid shift to affect you more dramatically, i.e., nausea and BP drops. My suggestion is that if you know you have more than your normal amount of fluid on, don't try to pull it all in one treatment. An adjustment of as little as .2 (k) can make all the difference. I ALWAYS figure my own total fluid removal, no matter what they have as my "dry weight". Sodium intake can also affect how easy it is for your body to "give up" the fluid and for us female species, our monthly hormonal fluctuations also affect how tightly our body wants to hold onto fluid.Also, I believe that BP taken every 15 minutes is safer than every 1/2 hour. If I am "BP challenged" during a treatment, I will ask for the BP monitor to take every 5 or 10 minutes. I also insist that the BP monitor be "turned" so that I can keep track of my own pressure and anticipate if I am about to "take a plunge". Pay attention to how your body feels at different BP, you will be able to anticpate by looking at your monitor and tracking it. I'm assuming that you were already reclining since you mention that you 'woke up', but on the off-chance that you WEREN'T, make sure that your chair is reclining during the last hour or so of your treatment when the chance of a BP drop is greatest.One more thing, don't know if your unit allows eating, but statistically, most people's BP does drop after eating, when the blood vessels send more volume to the stomach area for digestion. Since part of our blood volume is already outside our body, this can cause a DRAMATIC drop in BP and often does, causing nausea & fainting.
Before the days of bicarbs most patiens threw up all the time. I remember the techs were often busier cleaning up the mess than any other task.
LOL with you long & hard about me not looking at thread dates!!! I'll get better! As for your question, I like the profiling with the sodium ramp (or modeling I've also heard it called). I think it's an individual thing. For years I didn't use the sodium ramp and ran on straight 138/140 sodium, then began to have severe bone pain in middle of treatment. The sodium ramp took care of that. If both are working for you, why do you want to remove the sodium ramp?
Very good advice!! (even if posted in very old threads
LOL with you long & hard about me not looking at thread dates!!!
Because I thought that less salt in my body would be better. That maybe I wouldn't get so thirsty afterwards? Who knows .. I am still learning. They put me on the sodium ramp in the first place to stop my cramping at the end and the BP drop. But since then I have put on the profiling so I didnt know if both was necessary. Speaking of dialysis ... my cab is late I am supposed to be AT dialysis right now
Now I know the symtoms of crashing as I call it and notify the staff before I crash. Knowing your own body and how it reacts is the best thing you can do for yourself. No one reacts the same but I know we all have had some scares.