AlexK
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Posts: 1
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« on: October 04, 2005, 06:33:50 AM » |
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Hi, All!
I'm no longer on dialysis, thanks to a working transplant of some 2+ years duration. So far, so good, knock wood. But did I HATE dialysis? You had better believe it! I did manual PD exchanges, 3 times a day, for almost a year before my transplant. From the minute I had my PD catheter inserted, I suddenly looked at least 5 months pregnant, and after a fill, I felt (and looked) ready to deliver that non-existent new addition to the family... Honestly, I had to change my wardrobe to accomodate the huge bulge.
Otherwide, I guess I looked pretty normal (even with the bags under my eyes), but I got mighty sick of being asked "when are you due?" Healthwise, I felt like garbage most of the time - exhausted, totally sapped... I was vomiting every day (morning sickness, anyone?), getting Epo shots every other day, getting iron infusions to the point that I thought I was going to rust, and following a vegan diet that I hoped would help delay the inevitable. No chocolate, no alcohol, no caffeine (there goes my coffee!) Needless to say, none of that worked too well, and while I was sort of on the fence about getting a transplant, I did join the registry, and when the call came, I gave it a shot.
Is life post-transplant a bed of roses? Well, to be honest, nope, it isn't... I take tons of pills every day, worry about what they're eventually going to do to me, still feel exhausted a lot of the time, still get Epo & iron (tho not as often), and wonder how long my new kidney will last. Even so, tho, I am thrilled to be free of dialysis, thrilled to have a somewhat flat abdomen again (tho you should see my surgical scars! forget the bikinis - I have railroad tracks everywhere!), and happy to just be living my life as at least a semi-normal person these days. Would I go back to dialysis? Yes, probably. I don't know how long my transplant will last, so it may be in my future again, and I'm down to earth enough to accept the fact that dialysis may again be inevitable. The prospect sucks, for sure, at least compared to where I am now, but I'd do it again if I had to. After all, it DID keep me alive for a while there.
In short, I guess you could say that I HATE dialysis, I HATE kidney problems, and I'm not too keen on kidney transplants, either - BUT - you do what you have to do to keep on going. Best of luck to ALL of you out there who are fighting the fight.
Alex
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