I am fed up of rushing around between work and hospital for my dialysis three times a week. I feel like it is taking up a large part of my life. My centre offers machines for use at home if we want it. Can those of you who do hemo at home tell me what the pros and cons are and does there have to be big changes made to the house? My room is fairly small and I understand that I will need a water supply to the room used for dialysis. I also have the following questions:
1) If I dialyze at home, do I have to do it every night?
2) Does someone else have to be present while I am dialyzing?
3) Will it mean storing a lot of dialysis supplies in the house?
I realise, I will have to self - cannulate so I am just asking questions at the moment. I have set myself a target of 6 weeks to self - cannulate and will make the decision about home - hemo based on how I get on with self - cannulation.
1) Depending on the type of home-hemo, as there as a few kinds. Nocturnal is nightly, traditional home-hemo is 3 x a week, NxStage is 5 or 6 days a week. You need to find out what machine they offer. I have heard even some traditional home-hemo patients do 4 or even 5 days a week.
2) Again it all depends on the training center, I sometimes dialyize alone, which is a big NO NO from my clinic, but others I know do traditional and nxstage by themselves all the time. Some home programs will not even train you unless you have a partner. For example it is a requirement to have a partner for the NxStage machine however people do dialyze alone all the time.
3) Traditional Home Hemo, HELL YEAH. You will have a TON of supplies and it will be a pain in the ass, with the plumbing and filters. I have heard of some very unhappy people after a while. With NxStage there are very little supplies. Except for my Dialysate bags which they are about 40-48 a month (you can see the size of those boxes at
http://www.ilovenxstage.com in the pictures section.) all my supplies fit in a 6 foot by 3 foot cabinet. And soon I will be using the "PureFlow" and I won't be needing the bags. Again you can read more about the PureFlow over at
http://www.ilovenxstage.com With traditional home-hemo you will indeed need plumbing modifications to your home. I live in a apartment and have done no plumbing mods to my apartment using the NxStage System One. It will not take you 6 weeks to learn to canulate, however since your fistula is smaller because it is still new, it will take a little longer. But since you want to maintain the "vanity" factor, I highly recommend you learn to stick yourself ASAP and use the buttonhole method. It just takes a tech or a nurse to be having a very bad day and next thing you know your arm has this big lump and is black and blue. I hope this info helps.
- Epoman