I have had a transplant before and it was literally like waking from a dream since I was sick since birth. I had not known the "awake" feeling that healthy people take for granted. I will never forget what transplant is like yet the msn group I belong to (Dialysis & Transplant City) always goes on about how at-home hemo dialysis is Superior to transplantation because of the pure fact that it is temporary. But I know from first hand experience what it was like .. being on PD... getting a transplant .. all the medication side effects ... the rejection that could be saved .. more years with my transplant .. knowing my time was running out ... putting work before my health because I was trying to get the promotion before I would have to lose my job (it was a 12-hr shift job .. no way you can keep that with dialysis!!) .. and then ultimately rejection ... PD ... peritonitis ... and then HD ... low BP ... cramps ... and a hard time finding my correct tissue weight since with my Peritonitis I became malnourished. Through my experiences ... I would say ... yes a transplant is better than dialysis ... but that is only for me and everyone feels differently. D&T City seems to think that people should hold of on transplants because of all the terrible side effects of the medications. I do have one question which it seems no one will answer: How many transplants can a person have?
But to jdat, nice post and don't worry I won't ban you for being so positive. I am just glad that you are happy and everything is working out for you. Thank you for all of your wonderful posts recently. But now you got me wishing I had tried the transplant route. Oh well, maybe if I HAD gotten a transplant I would have never created this site. - Epoman
Oh well, maybe if I HAD gotten a transplant I would have never created this site. - Epoman
I know some transplanted people who have alienated the dialysis community once they got a transplant but that's just being in denial!What I most appreciate about this site is there's an option to discuss anything related to the disease. You know as much as me that we can't close this thing into a small box.
I was very scared to the side effects of the anti-rejection meds, but I was more scared of dialysis. I was on hemo for a year and I had a very rough time. I'll tell the long story another time. I had my transplant in October of '02. My half cousin gave me a kidney on her birthday. Isn't that amazing! What I discovered is that while I did have some problems with the meds, I was way better off than on dialysis. I also had a lot more time! lol. The thing that a lot of people forget is that there are about a half a dozen different meds out there, and if you have a really rough time with one, they can switch you.I am lucky though, in that I chose a transplant center that offers a steroid avoidance protocol. I am on Myfortic (a drug similar to cellcept but with fewer side effects) and Rapamune. I was on Prograf but it caused some slight kidney damage which has reveresed itself since I switched to the myfortic.I dread the thought of dialysis again, but could probably do it if I thought there was the chance of getting another kidney. I have a life again, which I didn't fully have while on dialysis. My last 6 months on dialysis I thought I was feeling quite well, but after the transplant, boy did I turn out to be wrong.
Some prospective patients worry about the side effects of transplant and I say what side effects? I remember the side effects of dialysis really well, the blood pressure swings, the bloated sick feeling of having taken on too much fluid, the weakness, the yellowing of my skin, being one of the living dead. The experience was in a word disgusting. Transplant changed all of that. I got my life back. I go wherever I want whenever I want. I feel good again. My life is intact and as it was before. I hated dialysis and never want to go back. Transplant you say? I would say yes again without a second thought.
They probably will clone kidneys before that protocol reaches the US nationwide.
Quote from: BigSky on January 14, 2007, 06:36:04 AMThey probably will clone kidneys before that protocol reaches the US nationwide.Lets hear it for cloned kidneys .. no rejection, ever!
I'm looking back on five good years with a good transplant. There is no comparison to the years I was on dialysis and the years I was sick before starting it. Jumping through all of the hoops during evaluation and listing is a piece of work. The thought of going to surgery is scary. I remember looking up from the table at almost the last moment and saying that we really didn't have to do this. As a patient I could have pulled the plug on it right there, its our right. Good thing I didn't. No more dialysis.