Today the nurse was doing her round of giving medications. She came to and proceeded to giving the EPO in the arm when I stopped her. I told her that they usually put it through the line. She told me that the Neph. said that everyone gets it in the arm. I told to forget todays EPO and I will talk with the Neph. on Monday when he does his rounds. I have always had it in the line since I started. I want to know why is it being done now. The less needle pokes that I recieve the less stress in my life. I am in a Fresenius clinic and I wonder if this is the new company wide policy they started or is it just this Neph.
why are they using EPO? I haven't been on that since I was 14 or 15.. we use Aranesp. We only need it once ever 2 weeks and it's given through the line. I only know of one person in my unit who uses EPO, and that's because he had a bad reaction to Arenesp once.
Quote from: ChickenLittle56 on October 08, 2010, 09:59:03 AMToday the nurse was doing her round of giving medications. She came to and proceeded to giving the EPO in the arm when I stopped her. I told her that they usually put it through the line. She told me that the Neph. said that everyone gets it in the arm. I told to forget todays EPO and I will talk with the Neph. on Monday when he does his rounds. I have always had it in the line since I started. I want to know why is it being done now. The less needle pokes that I recieve the less stress in my life. I am in a Fresenius clinic and I wonder if this is the new company wide policy they started or is it just this Neph.EPO is more effective and lasts longer in the body if injected into the adipose tissue and not through the dialysis cartridge into the blood stream. The recent changes to bundling of Medicare payments for drugs such as EPO may have something to do with the changes in modes of injections. Previously EPO was paid separately by Medicare and dialysis centers had a monetary incentive to give as many injections as possible and their method was just to introduce them into the dialysis port without too much patient attention and notification. This may be a blessing in disguise because erythropoietin is associated with an increased risk of adverse cardiovascular complications in patients with kidney disease if it is used to increase hemoglobin levels above 13.0 g/dl.Correction, make that 12.0 g/dl:"However, correction of anemia to hemoglobin levels greater than 12 g/dL (to convert to g/L, multiply by 10) appears to increase the risk of adverse cardiac outcomes and progression of kidney disease in some patients."http://www.mayoclinicproceedings.com/content/82/11/1371.full
Well I have a problem with this as the normal on my lab is actually 13. So that is what mine is. Does this mean that I am getting too much EPO?