I felt it, and the buzz was completely gone. It quit working? This is her first and only fistula. Is that what happens - it just suddenly stops working? Is it just a coincidence that it stopped now?
Last week, the day before her transplant, the tech was getting ready to hook Jenna up for plasmapheresis. She was feeling her fistula and said "I don't feel the buzz, is it always like this?" Jenna said, "What are you talking about? It works fine. No one has ever said that before." So the tech hooked her up successfully and did it again the next morning. Then, of course, no more dialysis, so we didn't think much about it, until yesterday when Jenna said the fistula was feeling sore. I felt it, and the buzz was completely gone. It quit working? This is her first and only fistula. Is that what happens - it just suddenly stops working? Is it just a coincidence that it stopped now? The doctor at clinic today said "don't worry, she's got a kidney now!" And he said we may want to see a vascular surgeon when we return home (in a couple more weeks) to check it out, but he wasn't concerned. Is there anything else we should be doing? I guess I felt a little panicked, because we have relied on that as her lifeline for so long, and now it's gone. I pray it's a GOOD sign!Karol
When it comes to a clotted fistula "time" is of the essence. That doctor is an insensitive prick and will not be the one that will need a chest-cath put in "when" the kidney eventually rejects. I wish Jenna the best but at her age she may need a few more transplants in her time. So the longer you can keep that fistula working the better. Some fistulas can last "decades". Goofyninas doctor told her the same thing about her graft when it clotted, "don't worry you are on PD now" WTF? PLEASE see if Jennas fistula can be declotted, you'll be glad you did.- Epoman
Quote from: Epoman on January 25, 2007, 09:15:23 PMWhen it comes to a clotted fistula "time" is of the essence. That doctor is an insensitive prick and will not be the one that will need a chest-cath put in "when" the kidney eventually rejects. I wish Jenna the best but at her age she may need a few more transplants in her time. So the longer you can keep that fistula working the better. Some fistulas can last "decades". Goofyninas doctor told her the same thing about her graft when it clotted, "don't worry you are on PD now" WTF? PLEASE see if Jennas fistula can be declotted, you'll be glad you did.- EpomanWe are supposed to be here in La Jolla for a couple more weeks at least. Should I try to get her to the vascular guy near home before that or would you suggest finding someone down here?Thanks.
Why the hell didn't the two techs or the doctor tell us this?Thanks.
Well if I were you I would try to see if the fistula can be de-clotted ASAP, because what happens if the Kidney rejects and she needs dialysis again. It would be in Jennas best interest to keep the fistula working for as long as possible. Jenna just had her transplant, she is not out of the woods yet. If her kidney goes into a severe rejection episode and they want to give her kidney a rest, they will re-start dialysis and she will be back on a Chest-cath if her fistula is clotted. When it comes to a clotted fistula "time" is of the essence. That doctor is an insensitive prick and will not be the one that will need a chest-cath put in "when" the kidney eventually rejects. I wish Jenna the best but at her age she may need a few more transplants in her time. So the longer you can keep that fistula working the better. Some fistulas can last "decades". Goofyninas doctor told her the same thing about her graft when it clotted, "don't worry you are on PD now" WTF? PLEASE see if Jennas fistula can be declotted, you'll be glad you did.- Epoman
That is why one of this sites taglines is "A PLACE TO GET THE TRUTH" even if it is not what you want to hear, it is the truth. But talk to a vascular surgeon and get their opinion on the situation. Ask for a "Fistulagram" to see the extent of the clot, it may be minor and very fixable. But please talk to someone soon. Because if something does happen to the kidney, Jenna will need a new lifeline. I know you do not want to hear this but a transplanted kidney can last just a few hours, days, weeks, months or it can last decades, but you never know.- Epoman
So far I've been using the same old fistula for the past 27 years but indeed the thought of it ever stop functioning frighens me to death. I think I took care of my fistula as much as my transplanted kidney while it was functioning.
DON'T let them fool around with your fistula as much as possible. Don't let them use tourniquet!
Quote from: okarol on January 25, 2007, 09:53:11 PMWhy the hell didn't the two techs or the doctor tell us this?Thanks.Because as I said the doctor is an insensitive prick, he is betting Jenna's Kidney will last forever which is very optimistic however not realistic. And the techs don't care. Bottom line is they are not the ones living with Kidney disease. A friend of mine from one of my old centers was on dialysis, got a transplant and it lasted 6 years, he kept his fistula working for those 6 years and when he had a major rejection episode, he had to go back on dialysis, luckily he took care of his fistula and they used his fistula and he didn't need a new access or chest-cath put in. Now if Jenna's new kidney rejects and she needs to restart dialysis they will have to put in a chest-cath AND make a new access somewhere else other than the old spot where her clotted fistulas is now. Which would have been totally avoidable if the doctor actually cared or thought about the "what if's".That is why one of this sites taglines is "A PLACE TO GET THE TRUTH" even if it is not what you want to hear, it is the truth. But talk to a vascular surgeon and get their opinion on the situation. Ask for a "Fistulagram" to see the extent of the clot, it may be minor and very fixable. But please talk to someone soon. Because if something does happen to the kidney, Jenna will need a new lifeline. I know you do not want to hear this but a transplanted kidney can last just a few hours, days, weeks, months or it can last decades, but you never know.- Epoman
Its not uncommon that once a person receives a transplant that the fistula quits. It has to do with that the kidney starts working its magic and the hemacrit goes up thus making the blood thicker and clotting the fistula off.
As far as we know the fistula was fine Monday morning at dialysis in Pasadena. Monday afternoon the tech in La Jolla whowas preparing to do plasmapheresis noticed a weak buzz, as did the tech the next morning (which was Tuesday, right before the transplant.) I believe the fistula was probably waning but it didn't actually quit buzzing until Thursday.I spoke to Scripps today and they said that since she is immunosuppressed that they would not like Jenna to have any sortof surgical intervention now.
Well if that was true then why don't other veins clot? Ones that are much smaller than a fistula. And why wouldn't healthy people clot? I know people who have had transplants for years and still have working fistulas even grafts.