kidney failure is a terminal disease, it will eventually kill each and every one of us.
The thing is, even if I dodge the bullets from from outside forces I am still left with one that will do me in for sure. Eventually if I get to meet toe to toe with my enemy after all of the other battles and confrontations won there is only one left to defeat. He will ultimately win me out and my time will be complete.
Kidney failure is not a terminal disease unless you decide it is. There are people on this site who have been on dialysis for 25 years and more and are far from terminal. Transplant patients have lived that long and longer with a single transplant. It is true that transplants get more attention than dialysis but that is because of the drama and sometimes heroism associated with them. Dialysis is something the average person doesn't know much about. None of us knew much or cared to know much about it until we had to do it ourselves. The public in general is even less interested in the subject.Sometimes it is hard to maintain a positive attitude in the face of a major breakdown in the body. Kidney failure affects every aspect of our lives and most of the time for the worse. Transplants offer the closest thing to a cure for kidney failure that is available today. A good transplant will give you your life back in every way. I can't understand why anyone wouldn't want one.
Very good topic to talk about, I agree wholeheartly about dialysis and transplant side effects. Out side of renal community, people automatically assume one you have kidney transplant then you are perfectly normal. Damn those people......
....gets frustrated by all of the assumption that a transplant is a complete CURE for kidney disease? I mean yes, a successful transplant is the best form of treatment (I emphasize SUCCESSFUL), but I sometimes get discouraged by so many people thinking that all my problems will go away if I get a transplant. Sometimes I think the importance of dialysis is downplayed by the general public and the news media. Obviously, I'd rather not have to be on dialysis (who the heck would?), but right now I owe my life to that machine that I sit next to for twelve hours a week, and I wish that we had a little bit more respect for what we have to go through. I wish more people knew that a transplant is just not for everyone (I am most likely NOT going to get one for several reasons), and that even with a successful transplant, the patient will NEVER be free from kidney disease, and that even the most successful transplant usually won't last forever. Sorry if I upset/bothered anyone here, I just wish us dialysis patients would get the same recognition for our ordeal that transplant recipients receive. Take care.Adam