A lot of the time patients aren't informed about PD because doctors have vested interests in hemo clinics. I liked PD much better because of the freedom in eating and drinking. Since you do PD every day there are a lot less restrictions. There is, of course, always the possibility of peritonitis, which is what finally got me, and I'm on hemo permanently. I sure miss my PD.
i am wondering if u can tell me some of the differences between the two...and if PD is so great, then why are more people not opting to go on that verses Hemo?? what are some risks????i have so many questions, lol..enlighten me please!!!!
I've spent a little more than 5 of the last 20 years on PD. I had peritonitis once, and only once, as the same infection evolved twice, from a simple, easy to treat bacterial infection, to a not so simple and not so easy to treat bacterial infection, and finally to a complicated, untreatable fungal infection, which made PD impossible. That being said, if I could go back to PD, I would. In a heartbeat. I had control, because I was able to do everything myself. My days were free, because I was on the cycler at night and didn't need a day run. I was on my own schedule, and I loved it. You have to be extra diligent when it comes to hygene, and I wasn't allowed to swim, which sucks, when you live on an island, and must have descended from fish. *L*
I liked PD much better because of the freedom in eating and drinking. Since you do PD every day there are a lot less restrictions.
Quote from: DomJDavis1985 on March 24, 2011, 07:47:10 PM i am wondering if u can tell me some of the differences between the two...and if PD is so great, then why are more people not opting to go on that verses Hemo?? what are some risks????i have so many questions, lol..enlighten me please!!!!Hemo is usually done at the center, as you have been doing. PD is done at home on YOUR time and around your schedule. Dom, please look at my last thread that I started describing the difference between the two modalitites. I personally have been on PD for a total of 3.5 years and out of those 3.5 years, I spent a total of almost 5 months on hemo. I do know the difference. Both have advantages and disadvantages. If PD is so great..well one of our discussion on IHD was "why arent more people on PD?" I think HouseofDialysis started it. You know usually doctors do not sit down with the patient. I wrote/started my last thread because that was really making me angry. So many people do not go to PD because they are scared of infection. THe truth of the matter is there is a higher infection rate with hemo then with PD. This is not counting fistulas. The Lisa
Quote from: DomJDavis1985 on March 24, 2011, 07:47:10 PM i am wondering if u can tell me some of the differences between the two...and if PD is so great, then why are more people not opting to go on that verses Hemo?? what are some risks????i have so many questions, lol..enlighten me please!!!!Hemo is usually done at the center, as you have been doing. PD is done at home on YOUR time and around your schedule. is a lot more responsibility. It pays off. With hemo you dont have to do anything but show up, and take your binders,Pd has more responsibility, but I would not trade it for hemo! I can nearly eat anything I want because of the potassium is lower on PD because you are doing dialysis as much as your normal kidneys work. There really is not much of a roller coaster feeling of one day you feel good, the next day at hemo you feel worse then you did on the days that you were not on the machine on hemo. ti
Quote from: Riki on July 10, 2011, 10:15:54 PMI've spent a little more than 5 of the last 20 years on PD. I had peritonitis once, and only once, as the same infection evolved twice, from a simple, easy to treat bacterial infection, to a not so simple and not so easy to treat bacterial infection, and finally to a complicated, untreatable fungal infection, which made PD impossible. That being said, if I could go back to PD, I would. In a heartbeat. I had control, because I was able to do everything myself. My days were free, because I was on the cycler at night and didn't need a day run. I was on my own schedule, and I loved it. You have to be extra diligent when it comes to hygene, and I wasn't allowed to swim, which sucks, when you live on an island, and must have descended from fish. *L*Riki I am not sure if you have answered this before but why haven't you tried home dialysis? Since you did PD I would think that would make you an excellent candidate to do hemo at home...just wondering?