I Hate Dialysis Message Board
Dialysis Discussion => Dialysis: Diet and Recipes => Topic started by: Beth35 on March 20, 2011, 10:28:51 AM
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So although this is my second time on dialysis, I am forgetting a lot of things. It has been twelve years so my memory is foggy. How much do you drink in a day?
I'm reading we should only be having two cups of liquid in a day! Seriously?! How can you survive on that. I am so thirsty. What happens in the summer when it's hot?
What do you do to help that thirsty feeling when you can't drink. I don't recall having that much trouble the first time around.
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Ice, glorious ice!
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Don't know how people on dialysis survive without water!!!
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Well as far as I know it is
(output) + 500ml That is what my input amounts to.
I know for the ones with a 0% output it is 1000ml in 24h. (4 cups)
But please check with your doc. Then you know exactly what is right.
I like my spray bottle. (when it is a very hot day) :beer1;
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I'm allowed 1 liter a day. So that would calculate to 2kg weight gain between treatments. 3kg over the weekend. Sometimes I do a little more...... :o
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I think it all about the person and what type of treatment...as said before.. some people put out more and work more and they can drink more.... I dont believe that there is one size glass fits all...
I do Nxstage and I drink as much as I want .... I never think about fluid amount.... I only take of .25 to .5 k at a time.... I dont eat much salt with my diet....
So you should develop what works for you ..... So you dont have to take much fluid off..... Hopefully you can drink as much as you want.....
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I am on hemo and I still urinate. I am finding this all so overwhelming. I don't know how I did this for five years the first time around. :thumbdown;
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I am on hemo and I still urinate. I am finding this all so overwhelming. I don't know how I did this for five years the first time around. :thumbdown;
I would go as far as to say the
output + 500ml is your best option until you get to a doc.
So measure how much you pee just for a day or two to get an average, add 500ml to that and Bob's your uncle.
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I remember that before I knew much about dialysis, the idea of having to restrict fluids shocked me. I also didn't know you stopped urinating. I don't like the renal diet, but I cope with it and have pretty much gotten over the resentment of it. I've coped with the pills and the tests, and while I do admit to feeling fear about having to start dialysis, I think I'm as prepared as a person can possibly be. I don't anticipate a problem with self-cannulation. But the one thing that I think I'd have a lot of problems with would be restricting fluid intake. I honestly don't know how I will be able to do that, and that is one compelling reason that I want to do D at home. I'd gladly turn my basement into a makeshift hospital if it meant that I could drink what I wanted. Everyone has their limits, and this is mine.
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See I hate having to measure everything I drink and keep track of it all. The same with food. I hate having to look at labels and start adding up how much phospherus and potassium I have had in a day. It is a pain in the butt. I am so used to drinking a lot too and now since I can't I'm feeling very hungry. But then I can't eat what I want to eat and so I feel like I always have this hungry feeling and I hate it.
If I could do D at home I totally would. I am single though so I have no one to help me. :(
Dialysis kicked my butt yesterday and I'm feeling a bit cranky.
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I remember that before I knew much about dialysis, the idea of having to restrict fluids shocked me. I also didn't know you stopped urinating. I don't like the renal diet, but I cope with it and have pretty much gotten over the resentment of it. I've coped with the pills and the tests, and while I do admit to feeling fear about having to start dialysis, I think I'm as prepared as a person can possibly be. I don't anticipate a problem with self-cannulation. But the one thing that I think I'd have a lot of problems with would be restricting fluid intake. I honestly don't know how I will be able to do that, and that is one compelling reason that I want to do D at home. I'd gladly turn my basement into a makeshift hospital if it meant that I could drink what I wanted. Everyone has their limits, and this is mine.
I think if you asked any dialysis veteran what the worst part was, they would say fluid restrictions. It is just torture to be thirsty and not able to drink. I don't remember a single diet restriction from when I was a child, in fact, I doubt I had any because I just stopped eating entirely. However, I remember the panic of fluid restrictions after all of these years. The film Food, Inc. brought back so many horrifying memories, it took every ounce of energy I had to not burst into tears when the woman describes her child on dialysis, where he ultimately passed away. And I come on here and I wonder why, why did he have to die like that??!!, couldn't they have given him longer dialysis and let the little guy drink? There is simply nothing like needing a drink and having it kept from you - it feels like you cannot breathe.
Ick, now I've upset myself. Sorry for the outburst everyone.
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I agree that the fluid restriction is a real pain in the ass (forgive the language). I was told 4 cups of fluid per day plus however much I still urinate. I have lately not been urinating as much as before, so it is going down and that is a huge problem for me. But... it can affect my life, so I do it.