Maybe I have been unlucky, every time I have been off the list I could have had a transplant
Are you sitting on the fence wondering if a transplant is the right way to go? Don't think about it any longer, get the ball rolling and get listed now! Transplants work and they work very well. A good transplant will free you from dialysis, the renal diet, the uncertainty, the lack of freedom, and in short will give you your life back. How many life threatening diseases have a clear treatment option that offers so much? Yes it takes some effort to get on the list and you may wait for some years before a kidney becomes available but so what? Living donors seem to pop out of the woodwork when they find out someone close to them needs a kidney. I didn't expect any when I first got sick but several did come forward during my time on dialysis. Whether the kidney comes from a cadaver or a living donor your life is gonna be a whole lot better with that new kidney sitting in your hip. If you have doubts about transplant get listed anyway. When the time comes that you get the magic call you can always just say no. They'll have someone else on the phone seconds later who will be glad to accept it. So, you have nothing to lose and your life to get back to enjoy as you wish. Talk to your renal nephrologist and social workers today to get things moving.
I would like a shot at another transplant. Plus yes, I know the pros and cons of a transplant more than most. Seen it all. Just to have the chance to get free of this bloody machine. If I could I would have managed on CAPD forever without a transplant. But NOT on haemo. Some patients like you Epoman manage OK on Haemo, I do not. Hate it with a passion, if the needles were used again I could just quit tomorrow. Too many issues with Haemo.
Quote from: livecam on July 31, 2006, 08:30:25 AMAre you sitting on the fence wondering if a transplant is the right way to go? Don't think about it any longer, get the ball rolling and get listed now! Transplants work and they work very well. A good transplant will free you from dialysis, the renal diet, the uncertainty, the lack of freedom, and in short will give you your life back. How many life threatening diseases have a clear treatment option that offers so much? Yes it takes some effort to get on the list and you may wait for some years before a kidney becomes available but so what? Living donors seem to pop out of the woodwork when they find out someone close to them needs a kidney. I didn't expect any when I first got sick but several did come forward during my time on dialysis. Whether the kidney comes from a cadaver or a living donor your life is gonna be a whole lot better with that new kidney sitting in your hip. If you have doubts about transplant get listed anyway. When the time comes that you get the magic call you can always just say no. They'll have someone else on the phone seconds later who will be glad to accept it. So, you have nothing to lose and your life to get back to enjoy as you wish. Talk to your renal nephrologist and social workers today to get things moving. I'm sorry but "Transplants work and they work very well." is a lie, the statement should read "Transplants work sometimes and they can work very well if you are lucky" A transplant is a Crap-Shoot. I have seen to many people DIE from complications of a transplant, or have their new kidney work a week then reject.And this statement: So, you have nothing to lose and your life to get back to enjoy as you wish. Oh man you have your life to lose, and what about the live donor who gives you a kidney? and it lasts you a week or a year? they lost a kidney, and with 1 in 9 Americans suffering from some form of kidney disease, most who don't even know it yet. It's a gamble for them as well. ALSO I have seen people who get transplants and WISH to GOD they never got it. You are painting this very pretty picture like the news media portrays, "Wife gives husband her kidney, she gave him his life back" oh please, do you notice they never show a follow up segment years later? The bottom line is a transplant is NOT A CURE it is just another form of treatment.Don't get me wrong many people have transplants and it works out GREAT for them but the truth is there are many more sad stories than happy stories. I am not trying to discourage anyone from a transplant, it's your body, your call, I just don't want a member coming on here and giving false hope, now both sides of the story has been represented.You are one of the "lucky" ones.
You are painting this very pretty picture like the news media portrays, "Wife gives husband her kidney, she gave him his life back" oh please, do you notice they never show a follow up segment years later? The bottom line is a transplant is NOT A CURE it is just another form of treatment.
Quote from: Epoman on July 31, 2006, 01:47:38 PMYou are painting this very pretty picture like the news media portrays, "Wife gives husband her kidney, she gave him his life back" oh please, do you notice they never show a follow up segment years later? The bottom line is a transplant is NOT A CURE it is just another form of treatment.And I have also noticed that there is a huge chance that the live donor could in turn, suffer from kidney failure them selves but the media never talks about that. The medical profession does not seem to want any perspective live donors to know about that until it's to late.Also, Angie has told me that with drugs like Prednisone, that the user is highly susceptible to any every day illness ( like the cold or the flu ) that could mean a week in bed for a healthy person but could kill a kidney patient if gone unchecked. Nothing is ever mentioned about this either.
I'm sorry but "Transplants work and they work very well." is a lie, the statement should read "Transplants work sometimes and they can work very well if you are lucky" A transplant is a Crap-Shoot. I have seen to many people DIE from complications of a transplant, or have their new kidney work a week then reject.
I reread some of the previous posts and just noticed the one concerning donors. I don't believe that there is a huge risk for donors. I know approximately 50 donors. Some made their donations almost 20 years ago and not one of them has kidney failure or other significant problems due to their donation. Yes, some have cancer, but breast and prostate cancer are not linked to kidney donation.A lot of this fear of donation is generated by the media. Here in Canada there is a very subtle campaign against donation. So called medical "ethecists" suggest that patients who might become possible donors are treated differently in emerg - which is such a disservice to the dedicated professionals who work in ERs. There are also always suggestions about the serious "risks" of donation, but of course they never get specific. We have one of the lowest rates of organ donation in the world and I think a lot of it has to do with the proliferation of rumor and innuendo by the media.Cora