I also have a question. The logic often used to prevent patients having a heavy meal during dialysis is that it pulls blood flow to the digestive tract. (I remember seeing a study posted on another board which supports this.) Wouldn't using exercise pedals cause the same problem during dialysis by pulling blood flow to the leg muscles?
Well, I haven't been to the gym for months. I was having a gouty pain in one of my feet. Recently my neph has been asking me about my exercise. I went yesterday to swipe my card and see if my subscription is still intact. Yes it is! And I will be back on the threadmill.
When I need to exercise I go to the Arcade. Playing some of those games not only keeps me out of the kitchen but takes a lot out of me. lol
Also the building I live in has 4 flights of stairs. Sometimes I will go up and down them a couple of times.[/color]
Try ankle weights if you can't walk stairs.
Have a look around at sporting goods stores as I have recently seen ankle weights of different varieties. You can even get ankle weights that are adjustable with rod inserts.
Does anyone know if the exercycle at dialysis is good enough to help anyone lose weight? I know it helps remove more toxins during dialysis .. but I want to know beyond that.
I can never understand why they recommend exercise for dialysis patients. Normal hemoglobin for a male is 140, and even in the 120 range, an otherwise healthy male would never be instructed by his doctor to exercise, since such a severe degree of anemia is considered a contraindication for exercise. But with renal patients, given that it is unsafe to use sufficient EPO to bring the Hgb level to normal, so that most patients languish in severe anemia forever, in the 90 to 120 range, why is exercise recommended?! Dialysis patients have the further problem that muscle mass tends to be lost without functioning kidneys to normalize protein metabolism, and exercise raises creatinine levels by muscle breakdown, so again, they should be told not to exercise, since it is toxic for them! In the occasional patient with some degree of fluid overload, exercise can also carry a higher than normal risk for heart failure.I suspect that the reason exercise is recommended is psycho-social: the patients and their doctors both need to pretend that there is something that can actively and usefully be done to improve things in the otherwise hopeless trap of the dialysis world, so they shut their eyes to the facts and pretend that exercise will help make things all right again.