I know what you mean. On PD I could drink but on HD I can't. On PD I had IBS symptoms that they deny as related. On HD I don't have the same symptoms. On PD (since it was every night) I slept better even though hooked to a machine. On HD when I get home free from the machine I have trouble sleeping. Odd. On PD I never had to even watch my weight until I started having the IBS symptoms and was retaining fluid. On HD I come in heavy (3 - 5 kg each session at only 64kg) 3 days a week. I feel as if they see me as "noncompliant" even though I am trying my best! I would love to see them try this diet! Them walking around the dialysis unit with thier bottles of coke and huge coffees. They can't even go their entire shift without a drink (can't they wait til break? lol). Yet we have to deprive ourself of drinks. I keep telling myself to pretend it is like those days were you fast. But I just am so darn thirsty all the time. Grr.. What to do.. what to do ... Even desperate enough to consider buying a DigiStraw!
I hate to be gruff about this but if you really want to do well you will find a way to do it. If you are thinking of a transplant they will look at dialysis compliance history as part of the decision they make in the listing process. You really can do better if you want to. Play their game and remember that dialysis is temporary if you let it be...you will get a transplant and this will be done. I want a trike!
Keep your head up man. You are defiantly not a failure even though you may feel that way some times. How do I know this you might ask? Well anyone that has a stroke or two and gets themself a Trike so they can keep on riding is pretty cool to me and someone I would look up to. Forget all that other s*!t If I were going to the center 5 or 6 times a week there would be no telling how I would feel. I am there 3 times a week which until very recently I would have a bad day each time from so much fluid gain. Keep using that negative emotion to make something good. Even from where I'm sitting right now (in a dialysis chair), bad can be good if I make it so. Take is easy.
(Just because I don't fit someone else's mold.) I've searched for other modalities to allow me to conform.
I dont understand why you have to have a partner, is it for a certain type of dialysis? I'm single and do CAPD but i still get the old fluid restriction thing too! I dont like going around looking 6 months pregnant, having always been very slim/skinny, but i just remind myself that its keeping me alive. I do find the not drinking as much as you want thing torture, but if i give in to temptation its not so bad , i just do an extra exchange (5 instead of 4) There is no easy answer, but you do need to find a compromise, i cant see the point in gaining extra 'time' if you are totally miserable. The doctors and nurses should give these 'restrictions' a try sometime, then they may see we are only human. Its easy for them to say 'dont drink' they dont have to do it.
Before becoming a renal patient I lived briefly in a third world country where it was not safe to drink the local water, so all the water I drank was bottled water. Since I had to order it once a week, I got to know my requirements fairly well, and I found I regularly drank 27 liters a week. On dialysis, however, I was required to drink no more than 9 liters a week. Now whenever a medical procedure demands of the patient a three-fold reduction in the fulfillment of a natural need vital for survival, it is demanding more than the body was designed to tolerate. If you had to consume only one-third of your normal, spontaneous amount of oxygen, for example, you would be unconscious and run a high risk of respiratory acidosis. Thus no patient should feel guilty for not being able to comply with what nature itself would characterize as the unreasonable demands of an utterly inadequate form of therapy. On the contrary, the guilt is with the medical profession for having nothing better to offer most patients more than sixty years after the invention of the dialysis machine! The dialysis machine was invented simultaneously with the first mass-produced jet aircraft by the Luftwaffe, and now we are in the era of the space shuttle, but who can claim that dialysis has made as much progress in that same amount of time as aeronautics has?
I dont understand why you have to have a partner, is it for a certain type of dialysis?
I do in-clinic hemo 4 times a week. It has been as much as 6 days a week. I've gotten better. Reading the posts, I find that "Oh my gosh! You should learn to control your fluid better!" As hard as I try, 4 times a week is as good as I seem to be able to do. I get the same reaction from the doctors and nurses. I feel like some sort of failure, because I can't seemingly deprive myself of fluids to the extent expected of me. I'm noncompliant. I hate that word! (Just because I don't fit someone else's mold.) I've searched for other modalities to allow me to conform. I fit well with a PD cycler, but had terrible side effects. I had IBS like systems, constantly. Also, I'd likely be on for 11 hours nightly. I would hate to be hooked to a machine that long, everyday of my life. I also hated that my tummy was nearly twice it's original size. I'm single, and wonder how I'd ever find a potential partner that way. I think it would scare them to death. Other daily options are not available to me. The doctors and nurses have stopped harping at me, and only politely caution me from time to time when I get carried away. I was okay until I started reading IHD, then I became displeased because I couldn't find a way to conform. I really wish I could find a mode that worked well for me, but since there isn't one available, I have to learn to be happy once again. Thank God for dialysis, no matter how inadequate it is. I have to remember that the days I have left are a bonus, and I should live to enjoy them!I feel better already.
I found I regularly drank 27 liters a week. On dialysis, however, I was required to drink no more than 9 liters a week. Now whenever a medical procedure demands of the patient a three-fold reduction in the fulfillment of a natural need vital for survival.
Quote from: KICKSTART on March 01, 2007, 02:23:07 PMI dont understand why you have to have a partner, is it for a certain type of dialysis? NxStage is Hemo. It is advised that their be someone other than you there in case of an emergency. I know plenty who dialize alone, me inclusive, but it is really taking a risk. If I were to pass out and I pull a needle out, I would probably die. Not likely to happen, but could.
Quote from: MJB on March 01, 2007, 04:00:44 PMQuote from: KICKSTART on March 01, 2007, 02:23:07 PMI dont understand why you have to have a partner, is it for a certain type of dialysis? NxStage is Hemo. It is advised that their be someone other than you there in case of an emergency. I know plenty who dialize alone, me inclusive, but it is really taking a risk. If I were to pass out and I pull a needle out, I would probably die. Not likely to happen, but could.I'm fortunate in that I'm still pre-D, but I am considering that if I choose hemo, I want to be on NxStage, but I have no partner. I am thinking that I might have a friend (or a hired companion posing as a friend) go through the training with me, and be there for the home checks, and then when nobody's looking, just wing it myself! I am aware of the risks of doing it alone, but feel that for me, NxStage would probably be my best shot at a 'normal' life, and well worth those risks. (One factor in this thinking is that I am already 61 years old, and while I intend to live a lot longer - and with my family's genes, it's likely - but it's not as if I have my "whole life" ahead of me.)Comments? Anecdotes? Criticisms? Potshots? All replies welcome!
I remember reading an article in the New York Times in 1975 about a portable hemodialysis machine which could be contained in a backpack, hooked up to the patient's circulation, and would continually dialize the patient just like a normal kidney. This was characterized in the article as something on the immediate horizon, but what ever happened to it? There have been countless lines of research over the last 60 years which could have led to dialysis patients not having to endure fluid restrictions, such as Professor Smythe's bio-artificial, implantable kidney, the 1975 backpack possibility, the 2-hour daily concentrated hemodialysis developed in the Soviet Union in the early 1990s, etc., but none of these ever reached full development, due to one problem or another. This doesn't even take into account what progress could and should have been achieved in perfecting anti-rejection medications so that xenotransplanted kidneys could be accepted, which would have allowed every patient to get a new kidney from a pig or a monkey at the onset of renal failure without ever having to go through dialysis and its fluid restrictions.