Are your doctors just telling you that it isn't from the medications to make you keep taking them? Have they tried other forms of the medications?
I think there does come a point when we have to ask if it's worth it. If we give up our ability to live a happy life to make these kidneys happy, then what have we really gained? A kidney that's attached to a body that can't get off the couch? The only ones who'd end up happy would be the transplant centers for maintaining their good statistics.
Are you on prednisone, too? Why is your transplant center saying your issues aren't from the medications?
I think there does come a point when we have to ask if it's worth it.
It's been almost a year since my transplant. I don't think I would trade it to go back, but sometimes I wonder...Since my transplant I've developed horrible neuropathy in my legs and feet. The rejection drugs cause diabetes, but the endocrinologist says the neuropathy is from that because of the timeframe, that I have a severe case that is of someone who has been a diabetic for 20 years. He says it's also the rejection drugs. My nephrologist says it's not the rejection drugs. In other words - no one knows.I struggle to walk. It hurts so bad at times that I just CAN'T walk. While on PD, I never had this issue and was fully mobile - pretty active, really. Now, I feel stuck - gaining weight at an alarming pace through inactivity. This causes depression, anxiety, and simply compounds on itself. I actually feel worse now than I did on PD! I love not being on dialysis on PD, though - I got an entire room back in my house and can sleep normally again, but it's certainly not the miracle I thought it would be.I don't know what to do anymore.