I had my first needle yesterday..one needle.. one lineno freezing wasn't as bad as I thought it would be.. Can't wait to get rid of the cath.
angieskidney, DON'T increase the size of your needle until YOU feel ready to do so. I have been on hemo for 8 months. I have very small veins and my upper arm fistula does not seem to bedeveloping. May never get enlarged. Anyway, I am still on only size 17 needles. Tried # 16 and that was a BIG mistake. Depending on your development, maybe you will be able to go lower and with higher blood flowrate. I can't, probably never will be able to go faster. I have constant pain in my entire arm during dialysisthat after about 2 hrs I need them to turn down the flow rate. I find if I put the cream on every 15 minutes for 1.25 hrs before treatment it helps with the needles. Good luck. SCYankee
I think the larger needle's in a short period of time is the "norm". Remember the more blood thru the machine, the better for you. I started dialysis April this year, was at 15 gauge within 1-1/2 months time. If the nurse's told you ahead of time about the larger needle's, thats kind of mean, that works on your nerve's. At the clinic I go to, they changed me up, and didn't tell me, I was the one who noticed, that was by the color of the "flap's" on the needle. We all hate needle's, but I can't recall the difference in the 17 to the 15, thank God it only hurts till they are in.
Stauffenberg that makes me feel a lot better. The last time they put in a catheter in my chest (May) I told them it is not coming out. I'm not a piece of Tupperware. So, it is in and doing okay. It has some "Proud flesh" around it, but it is not infected. But, it weeps and boy does that smell. Of course my chest is not too far from my nose! There is a doctor on dialysis at my unit and he just has a catheter too. So, when they start giving me crap about using my fistula I tell them "When Doc over there starts using his, I'll use mine."
I spent eight years on dialysis, during which I was unable to work and endured a kind of living death, during which my existence was plagued with hypersomnia, constant nausea and vomiting, itching, difficulty concentrating, and exhaustion -- despite my rigid adherence to the renal diet and 15 hours of hemodialysis a week.