Hi Waitlisted,Are you currently on the transplant list even though you have a living donor thats been approved? Not sure I understand. Is your living donor plan B?kelli
Based on the comments I have received from doctors, if you feel sick=require dialysis, you should have dialysis before the transplantation to recover better from the surgery.
Creatnine of 508? What is the USA conversion..?
What kind of symptoms are you having? I am just interested comparing to my situation. My creatinine was last time 508 (65kg) and I still feel good.
Quote from: waitlisted on March 17, 2007, 11:07:05 PMWhat kind of symptoms are you having? I am just interested comparing to my situation. My creatinine was last time 508 (65kg) and I still feel good.Regular nausea and extreme tiredness. I need to sleep a lot. I can do very little (around the house or whatever) before I crash and need to sleep. I also have a lot of the other regular stuff that goes with the territory - restless legs syndrome (severe at times), and badly dry and itchy skin. Also, osteoporosis and I have also had anaemia which is being treated with Epo. Just this last week I've also been very head-achy but I don't know if that's related. My blood pressure seems to be fine as long as I take my meds.
I know of a case where a person did receive a pre-dialysis cadaveric transplant. Just to give you a little background information...I had a fellow dialysis patient who suffered from PKD. Her sister also had the same problem but was not on dialysis. The non dialysis sister had a busy career as on overseas engineer for a large American construction company.When PKD made the possibility of dialysis a real one for her she was listed for transplant. I don't recall how long her wait time on the list was but a cadaveric kidney did become available and she was transplanted without ever having to start dialysis. She had a quick recovery and got right back to work without missing a beat.Timing the point of listing to remaining kidney function is important in making something like this happen. With a disease like PKD the decline happens over a period of time so there is time to plan for what is going to happen. It's too bad things can't happen that way for all of us but for the lucky few, they do.
Quote from: livecam on March 26, 2007, 07:42:21 AMI know of a case where a person did receive a pre-dialysis cadaveric transplant. Just to give you a little background information...I had a fellow dialysis patient who suffered from PKD. Her sister also had the same problem but was not on dialysis. The non dialysis sister had a busy career as on overseas engineer for a large American construction company.When PKD made the possibility of dialysis a real one for her she was listed for transplant. I don't recall how long her wait time on the list was but a cadaveric kidney did become available and she was transplanted without ever having to start dialysis. She had a quick recovery and got right back to work without missing a beat.Timing the point of listing to remaining kidney function is important in making something like this happen. With a disease like PKD the decline happens over a period of time so there is time to plan for what is going to happen. It's too bad things can't happen that way for all of us but for the lucky few, they do.Things are certainly done differently here in Aus . I have pkd but you can't go on the transplant list until you are on dialysis but you can get a living donor transplant before you start if you are lucky enough to find one.
The donor rate in Australia is sooo bad and the list is getting bigger, so the wait for a suitable kidney is also getting longer.