Because dialysis patients have low Hb levels if they exercise at the same intensity that is often recommend to healthy people it will tend to burn more protein/muscle. This is because in order to burn fat the body needs an adequate amount of oxygen. If it is not present the body turns to using protein as its fuel. Low Hb levels prevent dialysis patients from maintaining the proper oxygen level to exercise at such intensity levels.
Is banging your head on a wall exercise?
Quote from: kitkatz on August 31, 2006, 09:40:27 PMIs banging your head on a wall exercise?You can build up those neck muscles ... maybe even the traps! Just make sure you do the front of the head and the back of the head for symmetry.
Quote from: Zach on August 31, 2006, 09:54:06 PMQuote from: kitkatz on August 31, 2006, 09:40:27 PMIs banging your head on a wall exercise?You can build up those neck muscles ... maybe even the traps! Just make sure you do the front of the head and the back of the head for symmetry. Maybe I will at that.
Quote from: kitkatz on August 31, 2006, 09:40:27 PMIs banging your head on a wall exercise?I just got this in email (thought it was suitable !):Banging your head against a wall uses 150 calories a hour
The problem with the data showing that dialysis patients who exercise are healthier and live longer is that the effect may not be due to exercise at all. Rather, it could well just be that patients who are already doing better, who are already healthier, and who are already going to live longer, are the only ones who feel energetic and strong enough to exercise -- so the exercise is just an effect of their health, not a cause of it.Before I started dialysis my hemoglobin values were regularly measured in the 150 to 160 range (for males the normal range is 140-170). After dialysis, largely because of the exaggerated fear of EPO among most nephrologists, I was kept at a hemoglobin level of between 100 and 120, which left me profoundly anemic all the time by normal standards, Now no doctor in his right mind would tell a patient with that degree of anemia to exercise! On top of that, in the non-dialysis population, anemia in men is treated starting in the 130 range, and yet most dialysis patients treated with EPO are not even allowed to reach that range!A further problem with dialysis and exercise is that the high level of toxins left in the body by dialysis often interferes with the pituitary gland's ability to send messages to the testes to produce testosterone. This means that testosterone levels sink drastically, with the result that muscles disappear, no matter how much you exercise. So exercising simply wears down the remaining muscle mass instead of improving it.
Me too, me too. I got up outof bed slowly. Got dressed. Ate my 14 pills with a drink of water. I am jumping to conclusions today for exercise later in the day!
After reading some of these threads I think I will pick up the habit of a little more exercise when i am feeling up to it. I think exercise and a healthy diet can make a difference to anyones wellbeing. Its just forcing yourself to DO these things that is difficult.-Jaybird