I am convinced that life on D is a very grim existence that is like a time bomb of complications waiting to happen. I expressed this view to my Neph & I made him look uncomfortable (as I normally do). I would love to hear from real D patients about this subject.
Recently I met a woman who was a carer for her elderly diabetic mother & I found out that she is in fact on Dialysis. After engaging in a conversation with her, I found out that she is on D for many years now & here she was wheeling her elderly mother around. I was quite amazed. When I asked her how she feels after all this time, she said that she does sometimes experience a lot of tiredness. But there didn't seem to be much evidence of tiredness during the time I was able to observe her. It would also seem that she did not really suffer from many other comorbidities (although I could be wrong, I was simply going on appearances). The cause of her ESRD was impaired kidneys at birth. When I mentioned this to my Neph, he told me that for patients who had little other co-morbidities, it was possible to survive D quite well. In terms of diabetics, T1 usually fare better than T2Ds he told me due to this very factor. It would seem therefore that there seems to be quite a variation in experiences and this has now made me think a little. I am convinced that life on D is a very grim existence that is like a time bomb of complications waiting to happen. I expressed this view to my Neph & I made him look uncomfortable (as I normally do). I would love to hear from real D patients about this subject.
Hi again, I think it is a disservice to many long-term dialysis patients out there to assume that successful cases are exceptionally rare. From this forum alone, there are quite a few members that have been living as well as possible on dialysis. We all experience problems time to time but it does not negate the overall successes.I don’t have long-term longevity on my side yet but one could say it is my goal. Co-morbidities? As you know, Type 1 diabetes. However, when one takes away some odd skin problems and tiredness, I would say that my life on dialysis is successful. While I know that bumps in the road will be inevitable in the future, I’m still on this earth. Mind over matter. If the body still wants to kick it, I have to train my mind to go along with the program. I finished my PhD and I lecture/research for a living. I use a lot of my time on the machine to keep up to date on current events. I travel, eat well and am active. Success? I think so. As you may recall, my grandfather is on dialysis as well. He is pushing 90 years old and been on dialysis for 10 years. For the geriatric folks out there, I would consider him successful as well. You know what he hates about dialysis? Having severe arthritis and laying in a bed. Not the dialysis itself! Once he got the hang of fluid restrictions, his sessions go very smoothly. No problems to report at all. In fact, the last anomaly at one of his sessions was a machine malfunction; not him! His health has remained stable during this time and he lives a good life. He’s active (goes walking, attempts to dance), travels, goes out almost every day and bosses everyone around. The day after dialysis, watch out! Then again, he’s tough ol’ Russian stock…I think there are many other "successful dialysis patients" than you assume. Good luck and be well!
obsidianonGod bless you and keep you Sir.I am new to this journey but in the almost 90 days I have been on the machine I cannot say enough about my wife and care partner. We are both still working and we run in the evenings. So now she does all her errands and most of mine. Connects me up, visits until pressures even out, gets some work done around the house, comes and checks on me, feeds me, and then takes me off and bandages me up. Not to mention keeping me even on those days when I get down about all this. We have been married 40 years now and even more now, I know I got lucky and made the right choice.You and any care partner have a special reward waiting for you. I hope you know how much you all mean to us and how much you are appreciated.
Hello to all. I haven't been around as much lately due to various issues in my life and my wifes health. But things are better now while still in a state of flux. I am on both sides of all this as both dialysis caretaker for my wife and physician of 27 years now. I take care of a LOT of diabetics so I see all kinds of bad health behavior and damage there. My wife is now over 3 years on Nxstage and our joke is THAT IF ALL HER MEDICAL ISSUES WERE AS EASY AS DIALYSIS WE WOULD BE HAPPY. Dialysis is the one aspect that is stable and runs like clockwork 5 days per week. Her fistula was repaired back in January and working well after 1 local idiot vascular surgeon declared it dead and unusable. We went back out of state to our original surgeon who easily fixed it. My wife is in a wheelchair now due to a brain tumor (benign) that is effecting her coordination. She is strong but cant coordinate her legs well enough to walk . She has progressed to be able to stand. I had to practically carry her for a few months and she was mentally gone for about a month where she hardly seemed like the same woman I have been with 35 years. Now with the steroids I pushed to get her on she is back to her normal mental state which is a BIG relief to me. I thought I lost her. The tumor is inoperable at this point due to dialysis. The top neurosurgeon we saw out of state felt surgery and dialysis are a deadly mix for this type tumor. So we will manage it with steroids which at least she tolerates well. She is back to writing and happy . She is sitting now as I write this on her dialysis chair hooked up to the cycler and writing on her computer. So boys and girls there are things far worse then dialysis . Losing your body and mind with a brain tumor is definatly a BAD thing. Ill take dialysis any day. My co doctor in the office left last week to work in the hospital . We shared the office for 9 years. Before that I was alone for 18 years , so now I am back to that. My wife still comes in to help in her wheelchair 2 to 3 days per week. I only work 3 mornings now anyway as I am semi retired. Sometime when I feel up to it I will write about the saga of the "lung " problem my wife had that led to 2 hospitalizations and home oxygen for 2 months. (that was REAL fun). Thankfully it is over and her lungs are fine now. It was scary. As I wrote earlier, DIALYSIS is easy compared to all else we have been through.
Many here have done things that are considered successful by society in general, but those who putter around the house are also success stories as long as they're happy more often than not.