Low blood pressure is the most common side effect of dialysis, affecting one out of four patients at some point over the course of dialysis treatments. The two primary causes are gaining excess fluid weight between sessions and having a weak heart. In order to avoid excess fluid weight gain you should maintain a healthy fluid level by drinking no more than a quart of liquid in excess of what is discharged from the body daily and avoid salty foods which increase thirst. If you did gain excess fluid weight, discuss the issue with your dialysis team who can adjust the dialyzing time accordingly.
Oh goody, I'm 5/5
I was waiting to see if someone would post this. I see it as one step forward and three steps back. Finally, the NKF is talking about dialysis, but sadly, they are blaming YOU for low blood pressure.Seriously people, is it THAT difficult to show a little respect? And I am not even going to launch into the discussion of "having a weak heart" there isn't enough time in the day.
Quote from: Meinuk on January 05, 2012, 08:15:15 AMI was waiting to see if someone would post this. I see it as one step forward and three steps back. Finally, the NKF is talking about dialysis, but sadly, they are blaming YOU for low blood pressure.Seriously people, is it THAT difficult to show a little respect? And I am not even going to launch into the discussion of "having a weak heart" there isn't enough time in the day.I don't want to take their side, but fluid overload is 9 times out of 10 the patients fault.We are told early on to restrict fluid and sodium intake to avoid fluid overload.We sometimes take things/advice lightly without giving it much thought to what it can do to our hearts.Yes fluid overload and excessive fluid removal does weaken the heart and/or blood vessels.
sheesh Marina, if you are going to quote me, use the whole quote.Did you read what I wrote? Or were you just being defensive for the NKF and trying to put me in my place by saying 9 out of 10... blah blah blah.THAT IS THE PROBLEM. We are not 9 out of 10. simply dismissing us as "the majority" is not medical care. It is not teaching the patient to think nor be a part of their therapy. It is NOT forcing staff to look at each patient individually, and it is making every person that has suffered at the hands of an overly aggressive tech or nurse think that it was their fault.
...I can't see any circumstances in which it becomes the dialysis technicians fault that I feel like shit because I came into dialysis with 4 litres of fluid on which needed to be sucked off.
Quote...I can't see any circumstances in which it becomes the dialysis technicians fault that I feel like shit because I came into dialysis with 4 litres of fluid on which needed to be sucked off.This is why i don't blame them; I just do it and suffer in silence.
That's great for everyone. We can read in the dialysis facility reports how great everyone is doing on dialysis. Just because we have the highest death rate in the world, just means that our patients don't care about taking care of themselves and the proper attitude is to tell them that it is their fault that they are being dialyzed so violently. If they had kept their blood pressure under control or hadn't gotten so fat and diabetic, well, we wouldn't need dialysis at all. Shame on all of us. The NKF is spending so much time and energy to tell 9 out of 10 of us that we are wrong. We need to be more grateful that they are trying to save us from ourselves.
Our peers are saying that we should just suck it up. If the nine people who were infected with hepatitis C in my facility had taken better care of themselves, they never would have gotten infected it had nothing to do with the technician, nurses and Davita Management. Dialysis in America is just great. You should be happy to be alive.
I'll leave you all with this. If there are 10 students taking a math test, and 9 students fail, that means that there are nine stupid students, right? It could never be a bad teacher.
I agree with you, Meinuk. I saw issues with that first post as well.I know that I'm not the most compliant patient either, but I do my best. There are days when I know I've overdone things, and it's my fault, but there are also days when I've done everything I was supposed to and still feel like crap. Is that my fault too?Was it my fault when I cramped (and it was the only time I ever did) when the nurse that put me on set my goal at 3.8kgs instead of 2.8kgs and nobody caught it?Was it my fault when my PD catheter extension came off just after the nurse had finished changing it, and instead of following procedure and starting over with a new extension tubing, she just retightened the one that came off, and I developed a peritonitis infection that nearly killed me?I don't think so. It's not always the patient's fault, even when they try to pin it on us
Quote from: Riki on January 07, 2012, 08:05:55 PMI agree with you, Meinuk. I saw issues with that first post as well.I know that I'm not the most compliant patient either, but I do my best. There are days when I know I've overdone things, and it's my fault, but there are also days when I've done everything I was supposed to and still feel like crap. Is that my fault too?Was it my fault when I cramped (and it was the only time I ever did) when the nurse that put me on set my goal at 3.8kgs instead of 2.8kgs and nobody caught it?Was it my fault when my PD catheter extension came off just after the nurse had finished changing it, and instead of following procedure and starting over with a new extension tubing, she just retightened the one that came off, and I developed a peritonitis infection that nearly killed me?I don't think so. It's not always the patient's fault, even when they try to pin it on usI don't think anyone is saying it's always the patient's fault, but I don't think you can argue that it's always the technicians / centre's faults either. Of course there are days when you feel like crap, even when you've done everything right, this is just part or having ESRD, I just don't think it's healthy to look for someone to blame every time something goes a little awry or you don't feel great.
Quote from: Stu on January 07, 2012, 08:32:16 PMI don't think anyone is saying it's always the patient's fault, but I don't think you can argue that it's always the technicians / centre's faults either. Of course there are days when you feel like crap, even when you've done everything right, this is just part or having ESRD, I just don't think it's healthy to look for someone to blame every time something goes a little awry or you don't feel great.The 9 times out of 10 thing IS saying that they're always trying to blame the patient. Saying that the only reason for low blood pressure is overloading and a weak heart is simply not true. It can also mean that too much fluid was taken off in too short a time. It could also be that the wrong profile was used on the machine. I also know that not every time I don't feel great it's someone else's fault. The 2 biggest things that happened to me, that you've quoted, were not my fault, although the second one, the peritonitis, they tried to pin on me.
I don't think anyone is saying it's always the patient's fault, but I don't think you can argue that it's always the technicians / centre's faults either. Of course there are days when you feel like crap, even when you've done everything right, this is just part or having ESRD, I just don't think it's healthy to look for someone to blame every time something goes a little awry or you don't feel great.
The two primary causes are gaining excess fluid weight between sessions and having a weak heart