Does anyone know if saunas have been studied as a co-treatment? Sweat elminates water, salts and waste products. I know it can't replace dialysis, but for some (like me, who aren't yet on dialysis), it seems like it could be helpful to reduce potassium & such. Darnit -- I just wanna drink milk again!Deanne
The skin has been called "a second kidney" because, as you point out, it does have the characteristic of a filter removing toxins from the blood. In the days before dialysis was available, and even today in some third world countries, physicians can still observe the phenomenon of 'uremic frost,' in which the skin becomes covered with a thin, whitish layer of impurities filtered out of the blood by the skin after the kidneys have shut down. However, this is only after a long period without dialysis, and it is usually a sign of impending death, since the skin is not as good at removing toxins as the kidneys are!Some patients have tried saunas as a way to take off excess fluid more gradually than hemodialysis allows, thus avoiding hypotensive collapse during dialysis. However, any procedure that removes fluids will also increase thirst and reduce blood pressure, so saunas are not all that effective, because if you have the sauna treatment too soon before dialysis, you will drink back the fluid you have lost, or if you have it just before dialysis, you will make your blood pressure prone to collapse. I have a sauna room in my house and while I was on dialysis I used it for fluid removal, but found it was not very effective, for the reasons mentioned.
Actually such stuff will help.Uremic frost is where urea and other nitrogenous waste products accumulate in the sweat glands and when one sweats they crystallize after evaporation upon the skin.Normally sweating doesn't release a whole lot of toxins but research has shown that dialysis patients tend to release much more toxins over healthy people when they sweat. If one works up a pretty good sweat during exercise to soak the clothes they may notice a ammonia smell to it.I lose excess fluid through exercise and I am not more thirsty than normal, so I am not sure why being in a sauna would be any different. However all people are different and it may affect them differently. I wouldnt suggest going into a sauna trying to lose 5 kilos but if one was to hit the sauna the next day after dialysis and was only trying to lose a kilo or so then I personally would not see much of a problem with bp.
Big Sky - You are so smart! Are you a doctor in disguise?
Quote from: Rerun on February 25, 2007, 08:56:02 AMBig Sky - You are so smart! Are you a doctor in disguise? Just waaaaay too much time spend reading stuff on the internet. Also I spend my time on dialysis reading the Nephrology Nursing books up at the unit. Sad isn't it.
Yup, this is an old thread, but a really interesting one. I read several articles about dialysis in India, where they use ones skin as the dialysis membrane, as you are discussing. The person lies in a tub of water and specific herbs and it pulls the toxins out. There are also many ayurvedic herbs which are said to heal the kidneys.