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| | |-+  If you could travel with an incenter machine...
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Author Topic: If you could travel with an incenter machine...  (Read 1841 times)
Zog
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« on: February 26, 2010, 09:43:48 PM »

What would the setup look like if you could travel with an incenter machine? I think it would look a little like these pictures!  My wife was in the hospital for a parathyroidectomy last month and they were pumping her full of IV calcium after her surgery on Thursday.  After she put on 7 LITERS Friday and Saturday, she begged them all day Sunday to do dialysis even though the dialysis unit was shut down.  They finally gave in that night and set up a machine in her room around 9:00 PM.  I was worried the resident was waiting for her vitals to crash before figuring out dialysis would be a good thing.
« Last Edit: February 26, 2010, 09:56:57 PM by Zog » Logged

My wife is JDHartzog. In 1994 she lost her kidneys to complications from congenital VUR.
1994 Hydronephrosis, Double Nephrectomy, PD
1994 1st Transplant
1996 PD
1997 2nd Transplant
1999 In Center Hemo
2004 3rd Transplant
2007 Home Hemo with NxStage
2008 Gave birth to our daughter (the first NxStage baby?)
twirl
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« Reply #1 on: February 27, 2010, 03:25:12 AM »

would that be like doing dialysis at home
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Zog
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« Reply #2 on: February 27, 2010, 10:46:39 AM »

Not really, I think most people with incenter machines at their house have water rooms instead of dialysate on a cart parked in their door way.  Our NxStage just has a little black box the size of an end table that makes dialysate, although we don't travel with it.  We just pack dialysate in bags. 

We wish Duke Hospital would get a NxStage machine or two for acute care, then doing dialysis in a hospital room wouldn't be such a big production.  The acute care NxStage machine attaches to a special IV pole and is easy to roll around to any room.  I guess the Gambro does roll too, but it takes up most of their tiny rooms.  It's not really a good setup should something go wrong or a Code Blue and the patient would need to be removed from the room quickly.  However, the NxStage machine doesn't allow for easy custom dialysate making I believe.  Jenn was running a high calcium bath with the Gambro.  I don't know if they make a NxStage dialysate bag or line set with a port for calcium, etc.  I'm sure we could rig one, but I don't know if that would be FDA approved, etc.
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My wife is JDHartzog. In 1994 she lost her kidneys to complications from congenital VUR.
1994 Hydronephrosis, Double Nephrectomy, PD
1994 1st Transplant
1996 PD
1997 2nd Transplant
1999 In Center Hemo
2004 3rd Transplant
2007 Home Hemo with NxStage
2008 Gave birth to our daughter (the first NxStage baby?)
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