I Hate Dialysis Message Board
Dialysis Discussion => Dialysis: General Discussion => Topic started by: George Jung on February 05, 2008, 04:09:42 PM
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I am a physically active person waiting for a transplant. What might I expect to hear from my surgeon post transplant? Anyone here return to their sport post transplant? I do not plan to give up motorcycling (my sport) but I am curious as to what others have sacrificed and why. Thanks a lot gang.
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Are you talking about activities that can be done in the short or long term? As far as short term, I'm not sure since I was so young when I received my transplant. However, as far as long term goes the only restrictions ever placed on me were that I could not play contact sports. Turns out that at 5 feet and about 100 pounds I wouldn't have been suitable for those anyways, but I played tennis actively in high school and college, was on swim team, hiked, rode horses, played basketball, and pretty much did anything I wanted.
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I was told not to lift anything heavier than ten pounds. I was able to back to work full time at 5 weeks. You are phusically active, I don't see much limitations for you after you have healed. I was allowed to resume bowling about 12 weeks after transplant.
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Are you talking about activities that can be done in the short or long term?
Long term. Thanks.
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After I healed from my transplant. i went back to work a a Police Officer. No problem. I also trained horses and had a farm. I did everything I did before. Including motorcycle and 4 wheeler. Good Luck. NEVER WEAKEN!!! :boxing;
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George, I was also told no contact sports. I was told that after my first transplant in '82, but I would suppose it's the same now. Anything else, long term, I think is the same advice given to a woman when she's pregnant...if you did it before you got pregnant (or had the transplant), then you can do it after.
Short term, I was told to limit the weight I lifted, not to drive for 6 weeks, and not to return to work for at least 8 weeks (I have a desk job, but am in close proximity to other people).
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The decisive factor determining what you can do post-transplant is your new red blood cell level. Some people get a kidney which brings them all the way up to a normal blood count, so they have enough energy to do anything a normal person can do. But for other people, the new kidney does not stimulate the bone marrow to produce the normal complement of red blood cells, so the patients remain anemic. These patients can take long-acting EPO, but the problem is that the maximum safe dose of EPO only permits the blood count to be brought up to somewhere in the 110 to 120 range, which corresponds to profound anemia in a normal male, for whom a blood count in the 140 to 170 range is needed for normal strength. As a result, patients with a new kidney that does not stimulate an adequate production of red blood cells go around almost as tired and exhausted as they were during dialysis, and nothing can be done for them.
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You do what you feel like doing. As long as your careful. I didn't let my transplant change my life. Just gotta use your head. Good Luck! :boxing;
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FWIW... Here's a link to an article about Alonzo Mourning, an NBA player who got a transplant and is STILL playing professionally.
It's gotta be very encouraging for all of us! His story is particularly inspiring!
Kidney Transplant Allows Alonzo Mourning to Play in 2006 NBA Finals
Alonzo Mourning, professional basketball player for the Miami Heat, was forced to retire from the National Basketball Association (NBA) in 2003 because of kidney disease. In 2000, at the height of his basketball career, he was diagnosed with focal segmental glomerulosclresosis (FSGS). Over the next three years, his kidney disease progressed and he was forced to retire in 2003. Alonzo underwent a successful kidney transplant later that year and was able to return to the NBA later that season. As a result, he is now able to fulfill one his biggest dreams, playing the 2006 NBA basketball finals.
Alonzo Mourning is an important example of how kidney disease does not have to end your career and destroy your life. Through his work with the National Kidney Foundation’s Get The Score! On Chronic Kidney Disease program, Alonzo is raising the awareness of chronic kidney disease, particularly in the African American community. Alonzo’s presence in the 2006 NBA Finals is proof positive that kidney disease doesn’t have to stand in the way of achieving your dreams.
Wednesday June 14, 2006
Devon
EDITED: Replaced link with text - okarol/moderator
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That's great! However, Sean Elliott, (my favorite NBA player :-*) was the first to return to the NBA following his transplant. I believe it was 1998. SEAN ELLIOTT ROCKS! :bandance;
It's hard to imagine having that kind of energy again. I barely have the energy to clean my home! I can't wait to feel better!
Thanks for sharing the article, Devon!
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Let's not forget Chris Klug, who won the bronze medal in the 2002 Olympics for snowboarding only 19 months after receiving a liver. He won the medal only about three weeks before I received my second transplant. I remember sitting in the waiting room at clinic and reading the articles about him. :2thumbsup;
Friday, February 15, 2002
Updated: February 16, 4:33 AM ET
Klug completes remarkable comeback with bronze
Associated Press
PARK CITY, Utah -- Glad simply to be alive, let alone at the pinnacle of his sport, liver transplant survivor Chris Klug put a whole new twist on the notion of an Olympic miracle.
Chris Klug
Chris Klug's bronze put the United States over the top with its 14th medal, breaking the national Winter Games record of 13 set in 1998.
Using duct tape to bind together a broken boot buckle for his final race, Klug persevered and won the bronze medal Friday in parallel giant slalom snowboarding.
Philipp Schoch of Switzerland, the second-slowest rider in qualifying Thursday, won the gold, defeating Sweden's Richard Richardsson, who took silver.
Klug gave the United States its record 14th medal of the Winter Games, and pushed the story of his unbelievable comeback to a stunning crescendo.
"I thought I was going to die waiting," Klug said of the days before his liver donor was found 19 months ago.
"I was pretty scared," he said. "I wasn't thinking about snowboarding, or coming back and winning a bronze medal. I was just thinking about hoping to live, hanging out with my family and continuing with life as I know it."
In that sense, Klug's Olympic triumph was about more than sports. It was about the miracle of modern medicine, one family's generosity and the will to overcome adversity.
Leisa Flood, the mother who made the choice to donate her 13-year-old son's organs in July 2000, was overwhelmed when she heard of Klug's victory.
"I'm so grateful we were given the opportunity to help him," Flood said from her home in Idaho. "It makes me feel good. They both won."
Of course, such an improbable comeback story deserves an improbable ending, and Klug served that up, too.
During his first of two bronze-medal races against Nicolas Huet of France, the buckle on Klug's back boot snapped. He didn't have time to replace it between races, so he used some metal and duct tape to "jerry-rig the thing up."
At the starting gate, he felt the looseness in the boot, and briefly wondered if he could make it down the hill.
Klug had been in tougher jams than this.
"I just said, `To heck with it,"' Klug said. "If this buckle decides whether I get third or fourth, then to hell with it. If this thing's going to work out, it's going to work out. If not, so be it. I just made the best of it."
He won the race, won the bronze, and celebrated by bouncing his fist against his heart, then pointing over to his father, his girlfriend and the dozens of other overwhelmed friends and family who came to see him.
A few moments later, the 29-year-old scaled two retaining fences to share hugs with all his supporters. Tears flowed in some parts, but Klug just smiled, then headed back toward the finish line for the flower ceremony. Later, he gave the flowers to his girlfriend, Missy April.
"I don't even know what to say," April said. "Everything he's done is a miracle."
Almost lost in the celebration was the American record Klug helped set. He won medal No. 14, breaking a record last set in 1998 in Nagano. Including the halfpipe winners earlier in the week, snowboarders have accounted for five of those medals.
"That's pretty cool," Klug said. "I'm glad I could help."
The only American woman in the competition, Lisa Kosglow, lost in the quarterfinals and finished eighth.
Isabelle Blanc of France upset countrywoman and defending Olympic champion Karine Ruby to win the women's gold medal. Lidia Trettel of Italy took the bronze.
Blanc, who takes music lessons and has been playing the guitar in the Olympic Village coffee shop this week, dedicated her victory to the late French Alpine star Regine Cavagnoud.
Cavagnoud died last October when she slammed into a German ski trainer during a practice run, and Blanc said she would play a song dedicated to her Friday night.
"She's done all her best, she left at the top, and nobody can take that away from her now," Blanc said.
Klug's saga began in 1993 when he was diagnosed with primary sclerosing cholangitis, a rare disorder that slowly eats away at the bile ducts' ability to function.
He didn't start feeling the real effects of the illness until early in 2000, when a sharp pain pierced his right side. Quickly, his health deteriorated.
He moved up the waiting list for donors, but was also well aware of the frightening statistics: An estimated 16 people in America die every day waiting for an organ transplant.
"I thought I might be one of those people," he said. "Being on the waiting list was one of the scariest things I'd ever been through."
The wait ended in July 2000 when Flood's son, Billy, was accidentally shot in the head by a neighbor who was messing with a gun.
"As I sat there in that room and the machines were sounding, I was watching him," Flood said. "It's a kind of pain you can't explain."
Klug has yet to meet the donor family, although he says he plans to soon.
He wants his story to send a message to the world, "to get families talking about organ donation," but said he never felt pressure to win to make his ordeal worthwhile.
"All I can do is relax, have fun, enjoy each turn, and do the best I can," he said.
He came through with the bronze, and now America has its newest, and maybe greatest, Olympic comeback story.
"He's on the podium for the U.S.," said Klug's father, Warren. "What could be more exciting?"
EDITED: Replaced link with text - okarol/moderator
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Reminder: Please do not post links if text can be copied and pasted instead. Links often go dead or are broken and then the info cannot be retrieved.
Thanks.
okarol/moderator
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After I healed from my transplant. i went back to work a a Police Officer. No problem. I also trained horses and had a farm. I did everything I did before. Including motorcycle and 4 wheeler. Good Luck. NEVER WEAKEN!!! :boxing;
Well done Sir. Well done.
You do what you feel like doing. As long as your careful. I didn't let my transplant change my life. Just gotta use your head. Good Luck! :boxing;
That's my mentality but it's nice to hear someone else say it too. Thanks a lot.