Jenna is still on Prograf 4 mg morn/ 3 mg evening and 125mg of Cellcept twice a day.Since her creatinine is 4.2 and BP went up a bit, she is now on 2 BP meds.No steroids.Also takes Vit. D, calcium, multi-vitamin. Not sure this would help you, as she is slowing losing function and is waitlisted for a transplant.
Quote from: okarol on February 01, 2013, 01:05:50 AMJenna is still on Prograf 4 mg morn/ 3 mg evening and 125mg of Cellcept twice a day.Since her creatinine is 4.2 and BP went up a bit, she is now on 2 BP meds.No steroids.Also takes Vit. D, calcium, multi-vitamin. Not sure this would help you, as she is slowing losing function and is waitlisted for a transplant.She is on the list for a cadaver kidney? How long is the wait where you are?
Karen, I think it is weird you have 2 nephrologists. Sounds like they need to have a meeting of the minds.
Oh Karen, I think about you so often and am so angry on your behalf. I've never heard of all of these meds that you are taking. Is the kayakinginakayakate a powder that you have to dissolve in water and then drink? It just sounds unpleasant.Thanks for posting about your trials and tribulations. I am learning a lot from you! I am so sorry and am so frustrated that you are having to go through this.I am unclear on something, though. Does your tx neph think your damaged kidney could heal and that your renal function could improve? I apologize if you have already answered this somewhere on IHD.Please do keep us updated.
OK, so you surmise that your kidney has healed as much as it is going to. So my next question is does anyone think that your renal function will decline because of the injury? I know that we are all in chronic rejection; it's just a matter of speed and degree. But do you think that the long-term effect of the hematoma itself will be a faster rate of decline?That's interesting that your tx neph is thinking of putting you on the myfortic again but at a reduced dosage. I guess it's a matter of trial and error.So, labs on Tuesday then? How do you usually receive your results? Do you call the lab to get them quickly? I am authorized to get verbal results and/or to have them mailed to me, but the mail really is outpaced by snails these days, so if I am anxious about the results, I call the lab.I'll be waiting for your results!
Oh, and regarding that kay crap. I am very thankful to say that my aniticipation for it was worse than the reality. I was all convinced that I was going to gag and have a hard time getting that stuff down. Instead, it had some weird candy like flavor to it (reminded me of what I always thought liquid amoxicillin for children might taste like) and it went down with no problem. Not pleasant, but not nearly as bad as I thought. So that was a relief, at least!
one word for it BLURK!!!!!
MM, to answer your first question, I'll be honest. I haven't asked that because I'm afraid of the answer. Honestly, I think their answer is that there's really no way of knowing. People who have been excellent matches end up rejecting and going back on dialysis within the first year for no known reason, so in the end, it really is all a crap shoot to some extent. [/quote}Yep, I hear ya.QuoteYep, labs on Tuesday, at my local hospital. I was born there, volunteered there as a teenager, had my first job there, had my dialysis accesses put in there, gall bladder was removed at out-patient facility in their parking lot, and I received my Aranesp shots there a couple of years ago. I know that place well lol! What is nice about going there is you are free to pick up your lab results at anytime once they're available. You show up to the lab, fill out a release sheet, they copy your ID and then hand you your results. When I have labs done at the UW, I get to view them online. I even get to see all the dr notes and nurse notes for the past 3 years. Labs online are only available for 30 days. I've been lucky in that regard.Oh, that IS good. I get my labs done at Quest Diagnostics, so no personal treatment there! When I get my labs done at Madison, though, I get them by the time I see the doc/nurse/neph/whoever, which is in about 90 minutes.
Yep, labs on Tuesday, at my local hospital. I was born there, volunteered there as a teenager, had my first job there, had my dialysis accesses put in there, gall bladder was removed at out-patient facility in their parking lot, and I received my Aranesp shots there a couple of years ago. I know that place well lol! What is nice about going there is you are free to pick up your lab results at anytime once they're available. You show up to the lab, fill out a release sheet, they copy your ID and then hand you your results. When I have labs done at the UW, I get to view them online. I even get to see all the dr notes and nurse notes for the past 3 years. Labs online are only available for 30 days. I've been lucky in that regard.