My wife recently lost vision in the upper and outer quadrant of her right eye. We think it is due to a low blood pressure event after she went to sleep after home hemodialysis about three weeks ago. This damaged her optic nerve due to lack of enough blood/oxygen.
She did dialysis on a Thursday night (with some cramping that she thought was back pain) and a little lower than normal post treatment blood pressure (it is already low at 90's/40's anyway) and had blurry vision and pain in her right eye on Friday. We skipped dialysis on Friday because she wasn't feeling well and she woke up with partial loss of vision on Saturday. She was in denial until Monday when she decided she should tell me and go to the doctor. (She probably figured there wasn't much that could be done on the weekend and she was right.) The ophthalmologist first thought she had optic neuritis and wanted to start steroids until he spoke with her nephrologist and then considered the ischemic optic neuropathy may have caused the loss of vision. They did an MRI which didn't prove anything I'm aware of.
Anyway, this isn't cool, but the big thing we are worried with is preventing any more damage to her optic nerve and loss of vision. She has talked with her nephrologist and the neuro-opthalmologist. I spoke with the neuro-opthalmologist yesterday when they finally told us the ION possibility (my wife and I have been debating optic neuritis vs ION for 3 weeks). I asked him to speak with the nephrologist about the following recommendations I had.
1. We are going to decrease her ultrafiltration rate to 1.0L/hr or lower to monitor her blood pressure more often.
2. We may need to increase dry weight.
3. We need to get her blood pressure up. She is usually has a pressure of 90/50 which just seems scary now that I know it may lead to this problem.
4. We are going to try to do dialysis in the early evening (there goes normal dinner time) so she has time to recover before going to sleep because sleep naturally lowers blood pressure and may amplify any dialysis related hypotension.
5. Check hematocrit and raise Epogen dose if needed.
6. Low dose aspirin?
Can you guys think of anything else? I think I see that Richard had this problem. People on dialysis need to be aware of this issue. I didn't know about it. I always thought if she had a slightly low blood pressure we could just give her a saline bolus or a cup of water and she would snap back. It is kind of scary to think you can suddenly go blind because of dialysis.
This happened like 3 weeks ago. I thought they would have been quicker to act or advise.
She still can see out of her left eye fine and is getting used to her right eye impairment. She can still drive, etc. She just has a bigger blind spot.