My question is more about the longer haul flying (eg:anything over say 3-4 hours, which is common from Australia to get anywhere!)... we all know that the dry cabins in aircraft make people dehydrated... so, does anyone know would this have a similar effect on people in our boat?What I am really asking here is, if you're on a plane would it be reasonable to take extra fluids while on the plane to counter that or would it just make you massively over on your fluid count?
Enjoy yourself! Go First Class and get lots of those little hot towels. No reason to starve yourself either. Eat, drink and be merry!!
In theory a human can go for an entire month without eating, but I have found four days are about the maximum I can tolerate before I become too weak.
Quote from: stauffenberg on December 02, 2006, 05:53:10 AM In theory a human can go for an entire month without eating, but I have found four days are about the maximum I can tolerate before I become too weak.Four days without eating? Wow...........I have a hard time going for 4 hours without eating. Donna
But I had been used to fasting during the period while I was on dialysis anyway, since sometimes I would go for a day or two without eating just to avoid excess weight problems, so going 26 hours without eating was not impossible. In theory a human can go for an entire month without eating, but I have found four days are about the maximum I can tolerate before I become too weak.
I have to force myself to eat, as if it were a kind of medicine, which makes me wonder my kidney, which came from a much smaller person than me, is expecting me only to eat as much as was sufficient for him.
Many people report changes in personal habits, likes, and dislikes after a transplant, which is a phenomenon called 'cellular memory' in the medical literature, and has to do with how profoundly the kidney can influence the way the entire body responds to stimuli. Thus after my transplant, I hate chewing gum, which I used to do all the time before; I don't like tea anymore; and I am never hungry! I have to force myself to eat, as if it were a kind of medicine, which makes me wonder my kidney, which came from a much smaller person than me, is expecting me only to eat as much as was sufficient for him.
Quote from: stauffenberg on December 04, 2006, 03:02:10 PMI have to force myself to eat, as if it were a kind of medicine, which makes me wonder my kidney, which came from a much smaller person than me, is expecting me only to eat as much as was sufficient for him.Maybe your kidney doesn't like the food choices you make. Try eating more foods from your donor's country. You could probably ask Sara how to prepare them.
Don't underrate how profoundly the kidney is networked into the rest of the body! It sends out signals which regulate blood pressure, the manufacture of red blood cells, the production of parathyroid hormones, the operation of the pituitary gland, and all this in addition to maintaining the homeostasis of the supply of electrolytes and fluid in the body. The old saying about a drop of water falling into the Atlantic Ocean affecting every molecule in all the world's oceans is particularly true of the complex system of human physiology, which is so densely interwoven by nerves and hormonal messaging that nothing happens in any one part without affecting the whole. One experiment demonstrating this is that when cells are taken from some organ of an animal body, labelled with radioactive dye, and then injected into the body of another animal, even of an entirely different species, the cells can be tracked by x-rays as they travel immediately to the same organ in the new body as the corresponding organ in the body from which they came. How do they know where to go in the new body? How do they know how to travel there by the most efficient route in a totally strange environment? How do they know to stop when they reach the corresponding organ and not travel any farther? The answer has to be because every organ in the body is constantly sending out and receiving signals from all the rest of the body, so the injected cells can pick up on these and travel to where they belong. So if this is the case, it should be easy for a transplanted kidney to be sending out instructions all over the new body, changing a habit here and a taste preference there.
I should stress that I only tried fasting for four days ONCE when I was on dialysis, and I would skip a day or two of eating perhaps only one every two or three months -- so that had nothing to do with my bad experience on dialysis. What did surprise me though was that fasting made my potassium levels increase, which was because the catabolization of one's own tissues releases more potassium that metabolism of external sources of calories. Fasting has been used for thousands of years in various forms of traditional medicine as a way to cleanse the body of toxins, and generally, I find that I enjoy how I feel if I don't eat for a day or two more than I do when I am eating. You'd be surprised how much time it frees up for other things, and how much it takes you out of the world of established habits and materialism.Many people report changes in personal habits, likes, and dislikes after a transplant, which is a phenomenon called 'cellular memory' in the medical literature, and has to do with how profoundly the kidney can influence the way the entire body responds to stimuli. Thus after my transplant, I hate chewing gum, which I used to do all the time before; I don't like tea anymore; and I am never hungry! I have to force myself to eat, as if it were a kind of medicine, which makes me wonder my kidney, which came from a much smaller person than me, is expecting me only to eat as much as was sufficient for him.
But dehydration on planes is a well-known phenomenon affecting all people on long flights, and is due to the atmospheric conditions inside the plane. This is why airlines are always forcing liquids on the passengers and why some even hand out moist face towels.