Quote from: obsidianom on May 20, 2014, 02:37:55 AMFrom what i could read these FDA filings are nothing but mislabelings and user screw ups, and are OLD. Many are from 2005 to 2008 when the system was fairly new. I dont see any smoking guns.That's more or less what I saw. However with so many "operator error" diagnosis it leads me to question so many "not our fault" findings. Is that truly a case of so many bad operators or a profound denial that anything is wrong? A lot of little errors is still indicative of a culture of mistakes. Where is the quality control? And arguably if that number of errors are caught, how many are missed? I have had issue with aluminum for some time as well. The denial that there could be any problem with the SAK's came directly from NxStage a year ago. Without anything to back it up, they flat out denied there could be anything wrong with the SAK's. A year ago they could have taken action so see if there was a problem. We went to them with our test results in hand to say we've eliminated everything else, we think there is a problem, but with the culture of denial they just dismissed it. Am I off base thinking that every lot should be tested? I test every batch for chloramines. Monthly I test the SAK for contamination. At least quarterly I check a PAK sample. I take every precaution to ensure my safety and well being, it doesn't seem like they do.
From what i could read these FDA filings are nothing but mislabelings and user screw ups, and are OLD. Many are from 2005 to 2008 when the system was fairly new. I dont see any smoking guns.
From the research I did about high aluminum levels, the aluminum can be stored in organs like the heart and brain. Is there any way to know if we have excess aluminum in our organs? And can anything be done to remove it? I am definitely not liking the studies linking high aluminum levels to Alzheimer's. Most of the websites claiming to remove aluminum from the body seem like scams to me. I also read something about a chelation process, but was unclear if that would remove the stored aluminum. Any help would be appreciated! Thanks.
Quote from: Angiepkd on May 20, 2014, 02:59:17 PMFrom the research I did about high aluminum levels, the aluminum can be stored in organs like the heart and brain. Is there any way to know if we have excess aluminum in our organs? And can anything be done to remove it? I am definitely not liking the studies linking high aluminum levels to Alzheimer's. Most of the websites claiming to remove aluminum from the body seem like scams to me. I also read something about a chelation process, but was unclear if that would remove the stored aluminum. Any help would be appreciated! Thanks.I've only heard about chelation with regards "treating" autism. From what I've read about it (years ago) it may remove heavy metals from your system, but it's dangerous. I think it goes in the scam column.
Thanks for the info! My highest level was 30, and then came down to 16/17 and stayed there until my transplant in March, so it doesn't appear that chelation is something I need. Curious if there is a way to measure stored aluminum in the body? The fact that I am worrying about this makes me very angry at NxStage!
I have been trying to research such effects of long term elevated aluminum levels and indeed there isn't very much out there. While it appears clear that there is a distinct correlation, how much and for how long is still up for debate. While there is little argument we all have been harmed, a court would expect some sort of quantitative amount of damage which I don't know if anyone of us could prove.
Hemodoc was right about FMC elevating this to NxStage after exhausted testing since last Summer. Kudos to a few medical directors and patients who made this happen.. Of course it took too long and along with others I'm not happy with NxStage's response . Got a feeling that will change. I hope so because I love their system.
Quote from: caregivertech1 on May 21, 2014, 03:28:08 PMHemodoc was right about FMC elevating this to NxStage after exhausted testing since last Summer. Kudos to a few medical directors and patients who made this happen.. Of course it took too long and along with others I'm not happy with NxStage's response . Got a feeling that will change. I hope so because I love their system.Most clinics have only a handful of patients on NxStage making it difficult to consider NxStage SAKs as the source. There are only two of us in my clinic with NxStage, but none of us put together that connection with NxStage. In retrospect, we should have but I had other confounding issues at the time with some of my medications that may have been simply a red herring leading us away from the correct diagnosis.
I have been considering changing over to the Baby K for a few months because of the volume issue with NxStage, not enough, but I have held on due to my appreciation of their ultra-pure dialysate. I am beginning to seriously question whether I SHOULD continue with NxStage waiting for the next shoe to drop so to speak. This entire episode leaves me with little confidence in them to pre-emptively self monitor for complications. Is NxStage a disaster waiting to happen?