As my fistula is nearing 30 years since I got it, anything that helps prevent infection is a good idea in my mind.
Quote from: kristina on January 15, 2015, 04:20:39 AM... and all these precautions enable me to change into new dialysis-clothes very easily, without compromising my weight in any way, whenever I have to record my weight to the nurses before each dialysis-session...... all that just goes to show, how careful all these sorts of things have to be thought out to arrive at our real dry-weight, as soon as we start with dialysis...How do you allow for a daily "poop"? I doubt it is the same weight each time.
... and all these precautions enable me to change into new dialysis-clothes very easily, without compromising my weight in any way, whenever I have to record my weight to the nurses before each dialysis-session...... all that just goes to show, how careful all these sorts of things have to be thought out to arrive at our real dry-weight, as soon as we start with dialysis...
Quote from: JW77 on January 12, 2015, 02:55:25 AMAs my fistula is nearing 30 years since I got it, anything that helps prevent infection is a good idea in my mind.30 years! So you have been using the same vein for 30 years?
Going back to the comments about antibacterial bodywash in my opinion it is far easier to get an infection on your skin and surrounding with a catheter than a fistula.So using antibacterial bodywash in the area of the catheter can only help...I caught a MSSA infection when having a catheter replaced from infection on the skin surrounding the catheter..partly because they should have replaced it in a different side and partly because they forgot to give me antibiotic cover at the time.This is the worst type of infection, along with MRSA that you can get, especially as dialysis patients with poor immune systems.Both infections are prevalent on the skin.
Quote from: Sugarlump on January 31, 2015, 05:15:30 AMGoing back to the comments about antibacterial bodywash in my opinion it is far easier to get an infection on your skin and surrounding with a catheter than a fistula.So using antibacterial bodywash in the area of the catheter can only help...I caught a MSSA infection when having a catheter replaced from infection on the skin surrounding the catheter..partly because they should have replaced it in a different side and partly because they forgot to give me antibiotic cover at the time.This is the worst type of infection, along with MRSA that you can get, especially as dialysis patients with poor immune systems.Both infections are prevalent on the skin.Hello Sugarlump,Please tell me how you got this MSSA infection (what precisely does it mean and what are the symptoms?) and how was it treated?How did the nurses forget to give you antibiotic cover ? Was there too much action at the dialysis-center at the time?Did this occur before or after you had dialysis? Did you also have a tunneled chest-catheter at the time?Did the infection take place at the exact spot where the tunneled catheter "comes out" of the skin ?The nurses wrap my tunneled catheter first in disinfectant tissue and then they dry it again, before "putting" me on a Dialysis machineand after that I always put some clean tissue around the cath plus around "my" connection to the dialysis machine so that I can have a little snack half way through the dialysis-time ... ... When I am finished with dialysis, the nurse again "soaks" my catheter in several disinfectant medical tissues and after that they first dry it with clean tissue and then they put medically clean dry tissue around my catheter to finally put some tape over it and then they tape the catheter to my body.I hardly ever talk to the nurses through this long procedure, so that I won't take their attention away from "the job"...Was your catheter treated differently?Thanks agian from Kristina.