Needlephobic, Richard is right, if you are cramping your dry weight needs adjusting UP until the cramping stops...and if you have some residual urinary function that keeps kicking in your dry weight can be extremely variable. The trick is to see how much you have to lose at weigh in and how long yor session time is...then you will know how much you are going to lose per hour and that also can have a big bearing on things...ie your goal to take off 4 litres might be correct, but if the session is 4 hours your body will just not tolerate 1 litre per hour coming off. Personally, if I get over 500 ml per hour I start to have problems. So remember...dry weight is variable so your session goal should vary, and too much off per hour even though the goal is correct is not good.
Next treatment, go for 1800. If you don't Cramp up, then try for a bit more. The problem with feeling so bad after the treatment can have several causes....all of which can be fixed or prevented. Are they getting you blood cleaned out, are you anemic, are they still taking too much fluids off, are you meds correct. By the Way, you blood pressure can go way high before it crashes as they remove too much fluid. So, just because you have High BP, you may not be fluid overloaded. Most patients on Dialysis are on too much BP medications.
...Don't take fluids off of me just clean the blood
NP..Genlando is right...if you are cramping your fluid offtake MUST be reduced until you don't. It may be that your urinary function is taking out a lot of fluid and you don't need to dialyse as much out. Try drinking tonic water, the quinine in it helps keep cramps away.
Im sorry but just because you still 'go' doesnt mean you dont need fluid pulling off ! I still 'go' after 7 years but that doesnt mean i dont pull fluid off.
Quote from: KICKSTART on November 07, 2010, 05:19:25 AM Im sorry but just because you still 'go' doesnt mean you dont need fluid pulling off ! I still 'go' after 7 years but that doesnt mean i dont pull fluid off. Kickstart it most certainly does if your natural fluid clearance has not been affected and I believe that not enough is done when people start dialysis to establish whether or not this is the case. I've said before that an accurate bvm analysis is the most accurate method of establishing fluid retention. You say you still have output. Have you done a 24 hour collection? If your kidneys still clear 2.5 litres or more then you most definitely do not need fluid removal. For some reason the NHS kidney protocol can't or won't consider it possible that some patients are having fluid unnecessarily removed. At my first day on Haemo I point blank insisted on zero UF. They thought I was crazy but I got my way. This was 2 years ago but every so often I get the 'you may be holding excess fluid' remarks to which I have to resist. Anyway I got sick of the 'you don't know what your doing' looks from certain staff and I said 'Ok give me a BVM test' I have had 4 tests which are carried out on the Fresenious 5008 machine over the period of each dialysis which have shown negative fluid overload. They realise now I was right all along.
Kickstart, How do they measure what's in your tissues then?, when there's no evidence of swelling anywhere on the body and BVM shows no negative. When you get weighed at the clinic even if you always way yourself with similar clothing there's the issue of how much is in your stomach or how many calories you've taken in over the weekend which can cause a variance in this written in stone 'dry weight' line in the sand nonsense. If there's no test for what's in your tissues except dry weight measurement then at best it is only a maybe. Is this a good enough reason to slowly destroy your urine output by removing fluid by dialysis? I've been on HD nearly 2 years now never taking off any UF and I drink as much as I want. My energy levels are the same as any other healthy person of my age group in fact I have never ever had any outward symptoms of kidney failure. Slowly deteriorating kidney function was only detected following a medical 22 years ago (PKD).Surely I'm not the only kidney patient like this, it can't just be me can it? If there are others like me don't they deserve a more fuller investigation as to whether or not there's any excess fluid in the blood, tissue or anywhere else in the body before they start destroying possibly a perfect fluid output volume with UF removal in dialysis?
when i go in for d they check my breathing my heart and my legs and arms ect ect I do not retain fluids I just pee alot so when they do take fluids off i cramp and get sick since they are taking it off there and i go home and pee that means too much fluids be taken off by them and me I am a small person so there is no need to take fluids off just a little amount and i get sick