my creatinine runs around 4, bun 60ish
Once you start dialysis, which is life support, the numbers you clung on to with dear life everytime you went to see your nephrologist go out the window. You don't care what your creatinine is anymore or your BUN or your GFR. You jumped off the bridge to dialysis. Now you care about potassium and phosphorus and fluid. When you get a transplant you care about creatinine again. Make sense?
Lori, perhaps you need to ask them what the long term plan is to get you off D . Seems to me that there are only two ways...transplant or a diagnosis of acute NOT chronic kidney failure and just waiting for those kidneys to refunction (yah sure).Can you get listed someplace else? The best for you would in fact be to get a kidney transplant before your body suffers any residual damage from long term dialysis. I feel extremely frustrated on your behalf.
I have had 2 transplant evaluations at 2 different centers and both said the same thing. They doubt the board will approve putting someone who is not very sick on the list. And honestly I do understand, the sicker people need the kidneys worse.
I've had a similar song and dance. When they found that I was still urinating and I still had a GFR of 17, they suggested that they might just want to wait until I had lost all my remaining kidney function--and THEN they would put me on the waiting list for a kidney.
I'm wondering the same thing. Why ARE you on dialysis? Your numbers are good, and usually unless GFR is < 15%, or the patient is very sick, they don't start it. Are we missing something? Did you have an acute event of some kind. Did you have a 24 hour urine test? If not, ask for one.