I'm new to dialysis (only been on a week) im currently on 4 hours 3 days a week, does everybody have the same amount of time or does it vary depending on whats prescribed by your doctor?Regards
It also depends on your clearance, which also depends on your diet etc.
]It also depends on how big a filter your neph is willing to prescribe for you. My doc tells me getting a 180 at Fresenius is no big deal (default is 160 in many clinics), but getting a200 or (yikes) a 250 requires approval from the P&T committee.
Body mass is also a consideration. We have a person that weighs over 250 lbs and runs 5 hrs 3X/wk.
I believe/been told that the time is some factor of your weight in my US based center. For example I'm right around 90 Kilos and go for 3.5 hours, other smaller people can start after me and finish before me.
Quote from: lmden on March 31, 2014, 03:02:03 AMI'm new to dialysis (only been on a week) im currently on 4 hours 3 days a week, does everybody have the same amount of time or does it vary depending on whats prescribed by your doctor?RegardsMore dialysis is better, regardless of the size of the patient.In Japan and parts of Europe, standard in-center hemodialysis treatment times range from 4 to 5 hours, three-times-a-week.These countries have lower mortality rates than the U.S.For those opting home hemodialysis, nocturnal 6 to 8 hours, 5 to 6 days-a-week is the gold standard for optimal treatment.
I do incenter hemodialysis so I go 3 nights a week for 8 hours. I watch a movie or read and then conk out. It goes fast. THANK GOD.
BTW, I missed your note on your 32nd dialysisversery. Congratulations Zach, and I don't want a transplant either. I guess we are both crazy after all these years.
The cleaner you eat and use the "Kidney Diet" app, the better you will feel. The app is $1.99 be it iphone or android. My doc told me about it. It watches the levels nicely and the app is updated all the time. Please get it to watch you levels. I just got a transplant but am high risk, so I am still using the app.
I'd be all over that if they offered it around me (and allowed me to keep my nephrologists). The nocturnal center service they offer in the Davita's under my nephrologist group's oversight are something like 10 pm to 3 am - slightly longer than 3.5 hours but not a full nights worth. I don't know who in their right mind would go to a nocturnal session that doesn't allow you to sleep a decent amount of time. I understand you might want to spend the evening at home, but I would prefer to go directly to work when I get out.