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Author Topic: How to convince nurses it's the dry weight that increased?  (Read 3090 times)
marlinfshr
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« on: July 01, 2013, 08:15:37 PM »

I guess once they determine a dry weight for you they won't believe that you can actually gain weight. Normal for me is to fluctuate by 5 lbs or so up or down. Especially here in the summer.
Why I'm bringing this up because 2 weeks ago I was on their (Davitas) minimum fluid withdrawal. I was feeling great. Dialysis wasn't affecting me negatively. Then last week came along and I added a few lbs. Of course they are telling me I'm retaining fluid. I told them I'm not but they wouldn't believe me. So they upped it to 2000. I left dehydrated with a headache and my legs feeling like dried prunes. 2 days later I had the same weight when I went in and questioned why they're taking so much fluid off again. Of course the response was that I was retaining fluid. Once again I said I'm putting on weight. I'm eating more junk. I made the mistake of saying that my AC went up so of course that got her saying that I'm drinking more fluids and I'm not getting rid of it. I thought it was because I'd escape my hot house by getting in my car, driving around, and stopping at assorted food joints. ::) But what do I know? It's only my body!

Back to it tomorrow and I'll see what they do and if they bother to listen to me. The three days last week I left dialysis feeling like crap and dehydrated when up to that point I was feeling great. How do you get the nurses to listen? I know my body and I pee everything out I drink. I'm not swelling anywhere either. If they take out all that fluid again tomorrow, I guess the only option is to not eat for the next 2 days to lose the few pounds I gained last month. Don't they understand that weight gain can come from food?
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cattlekid
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« Reply #1 on: July 01, 2013, 08:22:06 PM »

A couple of ideas....

1.  Talk to the doctor.  He can change your dry weight "with the stroke of a pen" as my old medical director told me.  I told him that I was eating more after I started dialysis and voila, dry weight change.

2.  Tell the nurse or tech setting up your machine exactly how much you want taken off.  Don't let them decide for you.  I could only tolerate 3 kilos without crashing.  Anything 2.5 or under and I skipped out of there after treatment.  So I would sometimes leave with a half a kilo on just so that I wouldn't go home and directly crash on the couch for the next 12 hours.  If they balk, go up the food chain.  It's your body and your treatment.
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kitkatz
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« Reply #2 on: July 01, 2013, 09:14:44 PM »

Tell them what you want taken off and see it is done.  If they do not write up a complaint.
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Take it one day, one hour, one minute, one second at a time.

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Desert Dancer
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« Reply #3 on: July 01, 2013, 10:49:28 PM »

I second kitkatz and cattlekid. It's YOUR body. It's YOUR decision. Put your foot down and make them do what you want. Don't be afraid to go up the food chain with written complaints if they refuse (but don't allow them to refuse). Raise holy hell right there on the spot till you get what you need.

There's no reason on god's green earth you should walk out of dialysis feeling like shit when you know you've gained real weight. They are entirely at fault for that, not you.
« Last Edit: July 01, 2013, 10:50:35 PM by Desert Dancer » Logged

August 1980: Diagnosed with Familial Juvenile Hyperurecemic Nephropathy (FJHN)
8.22.10:   Began dialysis through central venous catheter
8.25.10:   AV fistula created
9.28.10:   Began training for Home Nocturnal Hemodialysis on a Fresenius Baby K
10.21.10: Began creating buttonholes with 15ga needles
11.13.10: Our first nocturnal home treatment!

Good health is just the slowest possible rate at which you can die.

The glass is neither half-full nor half-empty. The glass is just twice as large as it needs to be.

The early bird may get the worm but the second mouse gets the cheese.
Grumpy-1
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« Reply #4 on: July 02, 2013, 03:18:55 AM »

As said

A couple of ideas....

1.  Talk to the doctor.  He can change your dry weight "with the stroke of a pen" as my old medical director told me.  I told him that I was eating more after I started dialysis and voila, dry weight change.

2.  Tell the nurse or tech setting up your machine exactly how much you want taken off.  Don't let them decide for you.  I could only tolerate 3 kilos without crashing.  Anything 2.5 or under and I skipped out of there after treatment.  So I would sometimes leave with a half a kilo on just so that I wouldn't go home and directly crash on the couch for the next 12 hours.  If they balk, go up the food chain.  It's your body and your treatment.

It is your body and you KNOW your body,  Don't let them take control.   Tell them what you want taken off EACH session and if they don't do that - tell the Dr and file a complaint.    Grumpy.
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marlinfshr
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« Reply #5 on: July 04, 2013, 05:54:35 PM »

Well, the other day I had a hard time convincing them and when another nurse saw how frustrated I was she came over and explained to the head nurse of the day that I usually get the minimum (if any) and they dropped it down to 1200. But I was already halfway through my treatment so too much was still removed, but I felt like I had made progress. Until today. I saw they wanted to remove 2700. I am not retaining fluid but they won't believe me. They told me fluid can be anywhere in my body, not just where it is noticeable. I understand that clearly but mine is not the case. Then I pleaded that since everything still works I don't want my system overworked, only to destroy what function I have left. She told me that the dialysis will make the kidneys stop working anyway. Come on, they still work and I'm not retaining fluids. I don't want any more pressure on the remaining function or my heart. I'm getting frustrated. Then they lowered it to 2000 again which is way too much for me.

About 2 hours in I start cramping and have a pounding headache, which is about right for me with too much fluid removed. A nurse came over and asked what was wrong because I was moving my legs as they were hurting. I pleaded with her and said they are taking off too much fluid. She ,looked at the machine and wondered why as she new I usually barely had any removed. So she asked the head nurse if they could tone it down. Of course the head nurse said "no, just give him a flush". So, they take out too much fluid because they think I'm retaining it only to put fluid back in me? Whats up with these people? I know my body and I am trying very unsuccessfully to convince them I gained weight. "Oh", they say. "good thing your getting your appetite back" HELLO. I have had my appetite as good as its ever been since getting out of the hospital MAY 1st. What can I do to convince these people that I'm not retaining fluid and am raising up to my NORMAL weight. AAARRRGGGHHH!!!

One thing I noticed and pointed out was everything was fine up until Saturday the 22nd. It was the next Tuesday where they started pulling all this extra fluid. Now Saturday, the 22nd I noticed that they wrote down that there was a 13lb (yes 13lb) difference between arriving and leaving so my "new" weight may have been set to 13 lbs under normal. They probably misunderstood as I called my weight upon leaving that day and wrote down the incorrect number. Now I think they are using that false weight as a guide and drawing all this fluid. I'm about over it!
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Riki
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« Reply #6 on: July 04, 2013, 11:15:32 PM »

refuse to be put on until the goal is set where you want it to be.  They shouldn't be so anal about it.  If you still pee, you're not retaining, at least not as much as they think you are, and they should know this.  Start taking notes, stuff like your weight coming in and leaving, who put you on, what your goal was set on the machine, if you had any problems like cramping or headaches, and if you needed to have a flush/fluid returned.  Keep track of how much you take in and how much you put out.  That should give you an idea if you are retaining, like they say.  I do think that they are mistaken in what your dry weight should be.  And, as said before, talk to the doctor.  If the doctor changes your dry weight, there's nothing the nurses can do about it.
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Dialysis - Feb 1991-Oct 1992
transplant - Oct 1, 1992- Apr 2001
dialysis - April 2001-May 2001
transplant - May 22, 2001- May 2004
dialysis - May 2004-present
PD - May 2004-Dec 2008
HD - Dec 2008-present
Dman73
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« Reply #7 on: July 06, 2013, 07:13:59 AM »

Refuse this ... refuse that and give them a hard time about something/anything and they will document a case about you and one day you will told to find another dialysis facility because you are considered a belligerent patient followed by receiving a letter in the mail stating the same.
It happened to me and now I tone it down at my new unit and if I have a real concern I discuss it with the head nurse or my doctor.
Good Luck all ...
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Desert Dancer
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« Reply #8 on: July 06, 2013, 10:50:48 AM »

Refuse this ... refuse that and give them a hard time about something/anything and they will document a case about you and one day you will told to find another dialysis facility because you are considered a belligerent patient followed by receiving a letter in the mail stating the same.

So patients should just bend over, hand them the vaseline and allow their health to be destroyed in order to be seen as compliant little patients? I don't think so.

There's no need to be belligerent whatsoever. Just simply, quietly and consistently refuse to be bullied into a protocol that doesn't work, whilst documenting everything. Believe it or not, patients do still own their own bodies; you don't sign over your health and bodily integrity just because you're forced onto life support.
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August 1980: Diagnosed with Familial Juvenile Hyperurecemic Nephropathy (FJHN)
8.22.10:   Began dialysis through central venous catheter
8.25.10:   AV fistula created
9.28.10:   Began training for Home Nocturnal Hemodialysis on a Fresenius Baby K
10.21.10: Began creating buttonholes with 15ga needles
11.13.10: Our first nocturnal home treatment!

Good health is just the slowest possible rate at which you can die.

The glass is neither half-full nor half-empty. The glass is just twice as large as it needs to be.

The early bird may get the worm but the second mouse gets the cheese.
Sydnee
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« Reply #9 on: July 06, 2013, 11:46:55 AM »

Last year when Ed was still doing in-center hemo after he started back to work he was having trouble with the techs taking to much off on Fridays. You see for work he needs to wear steel toed work boots which weigh 1 1/2 kilos more than his normal shoes. The techs that weighed him refused to believe there could be much difference between the two pairs of shoe. For the first two Fridays he would leave in horrible pain at 10 pm and since he worked the next day he was late for work on top of it  he needed to be up by 5:30am there was no way.
He told the neph and the head nurse what was happening. They told the techs to listen to Ed. They also told Ed to subtract the shoes weight from the scale and tell the techs to use that weight. And good news it worked they listened.
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After a hard fight to not start I started dialysis 9/13
started on PD
hoping for home hemo starting to build a fistula 1/14
cause PKD diagnosed age 14

Wife to Ed (who started dialysis 1/12 and got his kidney 10/13)
Mother to Gehlan 18, Alison 16, Jonathan 12, and Evalynn 7. All still at home.
www.donate2benefit.webs.com
marlinfshr
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« Reply #10 on: July 06, 2013, 05:10:23 PM »

Well, they at least upped my dry weight a kilo. The nurse was ready to still drain to much fluid and when I saw the numbers I explained everything. So she said she would set it at the minimum and see how I feel. Cool! I have 4 hour sessions and I guess the machine started going crazy with a half hour to go. They tried and tried to shut it off but determined that the machine was having issues and that since I only had a half hour left they'd let me go. Of course I was alright with that, even though I lost all my blood that was in all the tubing. I guess it just looked like a lot but probably wasn't too much really.

My point is that with hardly taking any fluid, losing a little blood, and even getting off the machine a half hour early I felt great leaving. Just like I did upon arrival. No headaches, no cramps, not dehydrated. Much better then the previous several times when they drained all this fluid because they insisted I was retaining it. I hope they'll keep at what they did today.
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Wildrose
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« Reply #11 on: July 06, 2013, 07:31:30 PM »

I'm glad they changed your dry weight and that you felt better! The days I get off the machine earlier I don't have headaches and feel sooooo much better. Even on minimum I usually leave the center at a kilo less than I went in at, thats 2 lbs less. Crazy. I've been in the same boat with you regarding the dry weight issue, matter of fact I deal with this a LOT because my weight fluctuates by 5 lbs as well. I get harassed by some of the techs often, other techs know me and believe me when I say I have no fluid. But the ones that try to argue the point I just say no, put me on minimum. Usually they roll their eyes or frown, but they do it. I try to be nice to all the techs as I have to see these people every week and I don't want to burn bridges... but they sure irritate me sometimes.  :lol;
 
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1995 - Diagnosed with 'some kind' of kidney disease during first pregnancy at 16 yrs old due to excess protein in urine
1998 - Biopsy diagnosis of IGA Nephropathy at age 18
2007 - Successful second pregnancy, creatnine of 1.8 something
2009 - Successful third pregnancy creatnine of 2 something
2009-November of 2011 - Somehow went from Creatnine of 2 something to 5.43
November 2011 - Diagnosed with End Stage Renal Disease
3/28/12 - Started Peritoneal Dialysis
5/21/12 - Ended up in hospital for 5 days with PD fluid leaking through hole in diaphragm to right lung
5/25/12 - IJ catheter placed, 5/26/12 - First in center hemo treatment
6/15/12 - Back on PD for three weeks and hemo at same time, 7/7/12 - PD fluid leaked again, off PD and still on hemo, 7/15/12 - on PD again and hemo
7/23/12 - chest xray shows fluid leak again, off PD for one month with possible thoracic surgery in future to fix hole in diaphragm. 5.70 creatnine
8/7/12 - 24 hr urine test shows improved kidney function. 3.47 creatnine - Dr reduced hemodialysis from 3x's to 2xs a week.
Adam_W
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« Reply #12 on: July 07, 2013, 07:10:56 PM »

I don't ever have a problem with them changing my dry weight. I just tell them that I feel my DW needs changed and they say "OK, what do you think it should be changed to?" And I set up my own machine, so I just set whatever goal I want and tell the tech and she or he charts it.
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-Diagnosed with ESRD (born with one kidney, hypertension killed it) Jan 21st, 2007
-Started dialysis four days later in hospital (Baxter 1550-I think, then Gambro Phoenix)
-Started in-centre dialysis Feb 6th 2007 (Fres. 2008H)
-Started home hemo June 5th 2007 (NxStage/Pureflow)
-PD catheter placed June 6th 2008 (Bye bye NxStage, at least for now)
-Started CAPD July 4th, 2008
-PD catheter removed Dec 2, 2008-PD just wouldn't work, so I'm back on NxStage
-Kidney function improved enough to go off dialysis, Feb. 2011!!!!!
-Back on dialysis (still NxStage) July 2011 :(
-In-centre self-care dialysis March 2012 (Fresenius 2008K)
-Not on transplant list yet.


"Don't live for dialysis, use dialysis to LIVE"
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