I get my fistula tomorrow. I like my surgeon. She seems very capable. The anesthesia charge nurse is a good friend of my wife's, so I feel like I'm in good hands. It really helps to be related to someone at your hospital. They treat you like family instead of cattle.
I have had the same fistula since I was a kid and I am going to be 28 years old! I used it the first time after 10 or so years and at first it was hard to stick because I didn't know how the needles were suppose to feel in the fistula. After about 3 months I could feel when the needles weren't inserted correctly. My hand only goes numb if I sleep on my fistula arm and sometimes during treatment. Post transplant now and the fistula is still whirling away!xo,R
The thrill has never bothered me. You can feel it very strong. Maybe because I always describe it as a cat's purr & that is always comforting to me!
My surgeon had wanted to just use a "shoulder block", but by the time I actually got to surgery, I was a real basket case. When the anesthesiologist said that the surgeon still wanted to use the block, I said that this was the worst day of my life and that I didn't want to remember a single thing about it, so knock me out totally! And they did. When I awoke, it was all done and dusted, and I was left with a completely numb arm and shoulder, but that sensation went away fairly quickly.I am one of those people who do not find the fistula sounds to be comforting like a cat's purr. My scar is right below my left elbow, and the access will be just above, so my whole upper arm and shoulder is involved in this little venture. I also have a loud bruit/thrill in my neck which bugs the hell out of me. I can hear the bruit coming through the phone when I am holding it up to my left ear with my left hand. And yes, at night I can hear it if I lie on my left side, and it does bother me. So I got one of those white noise machines, and that helps. Maybe one day I'll come to love my noisy arm, but right now, 18 months out, it still irritates me. But I am still glad I have it because it always scared me that I might have to start D on an emergency basis and wouldn't be ready, but now I don't have to worry about that any more.I will have to admit that for the first year, my fistula really worried me because I'd get all sorts of creepy, lightning type sensations down my arm, and sometimes my fistula would just ache. There were two times when I demanded to be seen by the surgeon so that he could take a look at it, and he ended up thinking I was just crazy. He keeps telling me that it is just wonderfully marvelous. This past April 1st, I went to the ER because it was hurting...just aching...like it was blocked or something, and the doc reassured me that it was OK. I had never had a fistula before, so I didn't know what was normal and what was not, but after 18 months now, no one has ever been concerned about it, so I am not going to be, either. Any surgery is risky, and I would never sit here and tell you that you will be just fine. But I have trouble with anesthesia and other whatnot, and if I did OK, I think there will be a good chance you will be, too. In the grand scheme of things, this is a common procedure for a competent vascular surgeon.I'll be very eager to hear back from you once it's all over.