I have now been back to work for 3 weeks but now I am exhausted from work .. and it is only 2 hours each day, 2 days each week! What is wrong with me? I am only 32 and I bike to work and back and at work I am up and down taking expired items off the shelf at a grocery store. Today however my BP is lower than normal (still am off my BP meds) ever since Wed's dialysis and I was surprised that it is still so low even though I came off the machine 1/2 kilo up! It is frustrating because I am young and shouldn't feel like this! It is only a couple hours! And here it is only 9pm and I am ready for bed I don't get it. I just had blood work yesterday and even though I won't get to see the results until Friday's dialysis, the nurse came back to me all concerned about my meds because she says my iron stores are REALLY low. I told her, "Yes I am taking my One-Alpha like I am supposed it (Vitamin D) as well as my Iron pills!" She automatically assumed I must not be taking them I assume low iron stores make you tired easier? I am not sure. Can anyone add to this?
Ummm Angie, dont take this the wrong way but, i am here all hours of the night and i see you here also. Maybe your sleep pattern is making you tired, you know, not enough
Hi Bigsky,To show my ignorance. What is a crit line? I have always wondered how you get your true dry weight as I have just adjusted mine to meet my required dry weight. Cheers Alasdair
A number of things make dialysis patients tired all the time. Because they tend to have low iron levels, they have trouble making red blood cells. The fact that dialysis can only clear toxins 10% as effectively as normal kidneys causes the toxin build-up to damage the nervous system, which can also make you tired. Neurological damage prevents many renal patients from getting a full night's sleep, so they often pop awake in the middle of the night and can't get back to sleep, making them tired the next day. The kidneys play a major role in the formation of red blood cells, so nearly all renal patients are anemic. Epo can help slightly in treating anemia, but its tendency to cause blood clots means that it cannot safely be used to bring your red blood cell count up to where it should be, which is around 140 for men and 120 for women. Although a normal male patient would receive immediate therapy for anemia at a level of 130, most dialysis patients are maintained at a level of from 100 to 120. (The U.S. does not use the "system internationale" unit convention introduced in the rest of the world in 1985, so its measure of blood values is lower by a factor of 10.) The kidneys are also important to maintain and repair normal muscle tissue, so loss of muscles can make everything renal patients do seem harder. Low testosterone in male renal patients adds to their exhaustion. Having doctors try to guess how much fluid you should lose on dialysis instead of having nature take care of this automatically means that you must often suffer from low blood pressure after treatment. The main effect of this is exhaustion.The result of all these factors combined is that, of renal patients in the normal working age, only 30% actually are able to work.
When I dialyzed on the 5 am shift, by 3 pm I got "punchy" ... I didn't work well with others at that point.Now that I dialyze on the 6 pm shift, I can usually sleep off that night's treatment fatigue.I also dialyze T-TH-S, so only two business days are affected.