I have found that doing something the burns energy fast about an hour after you eat works pretty well. If you have stairs at your place of residence, try walking up and down then a few times if you can.
I am jumping to conclusions and flying off the handle around here for my exercise.
Quote from: kitkatz on December 09, 2006, 12:05:59 PMI am jumping to conclusions and flying off the handle around here for my exercise. HAHA, nice one kit.Listen ladies. I know I am not the best person to offer you exercise tips but I am trying. Maybe someone with better knowledge of the situation can offer up some suggestions?
Exercise: A Guide for People on Dialysis is available free of charge (in the U.S.*) from the Rehabilitation Resource Center, 414 D'Onofrio Drive, Suite 200, Madison, WI 53719. Phone: 1–800–468–7777. Fax: 608–833–8366. Email: lifeoptions. The book can be printed from a PDF (download free!) file at www.lifeoptions.org.
Body Mass Index. You got to be at or below 30 BMI to be transplanted. The only way I have found to lose weight on dialysis is to get reallly, really sick! I do not advise this wieght loss system to anyone.
Can you tell me more about this body mass index?
A Few Things to Remember About BMIRemember that your BMI is only one way of assessing your general health and risk for disease. A complete picture of your health risks depends on a variety of other factors, such as your family health history and your occupation.Also, keep in mind that BMI does not measure your body composition - how much fat and muscle you have. So a person who has a lot of muscle, like a professional bodybuilder, may be "overweight" by BMI standards but not at risk for weight-related health problems.
I have a BMI of 23.7. In the normal range. Thanks Foxy and Angie.
(Exercise: A Guide for the People on DIalysis)