We administer at home at start of dialysis once a week.
Quote from: Hootie on December 14, 2015, 09:23:46 AMWe administer at home at start of dialysis once a week. Interesting ... We were told to administer at then end of dialysis at the end of the week.Also at home
I take epo and iron at my clinic. I guess they need to up the dosage.
We too were told to do the EPO after treatment. My husband will be starting on Micera tho before the end of the month. Has to go to the clinic for that. Darn.
Quote from: PrimeTimer on December 14, 2015, 08:28:26 PMWe too were told to do the EPO after treatment. My husband will be starting on Micera tho before the end of the month. Has to go to the clinic for that. Darn.If they follow the same procedure they will iron load your hubby before the micera. I was given the first micera shot last clinic. NEVER AGAIN. The same night I developed spasmodic headaches that would come every 15 to 30 seconds. Hurt like HE double toothpicks. They were bad enough to make me cringe every time. Lasted two or three days. I am back on EPO.
I saw the nutritionist today. She said they would increase my epo. She also said to eat more red meat and put me o something called Renavit.
Latest test show it is up to 10.0
Nurse was telling me something about the NEW medicare drug changes, that Epo may no longer be covered without exception, that most all will be switched to (?) Aracept. Not sure of the name as I haven't had any, yet.
They will need to give you more EPO first tho before they can do the iron. The EPO will produce blood cells that are needed for iron to latch on to. You can read up on it here: "Kidney Disease And Anemia: Why Is It So, And How Is It Treated?" by Dr. John Agar dated 10-29-15.
Quote from: PrimeTimer on December 14, 2015, 08:36:00 PMThey will need to give you more EPO first tho before they can do the iron. The EPO will produce blood cells that are needed for iron to latch on to. You can read up on it here: "Kidney Disease And Anemia: Why Is It So, And How Is It Treated?" by Dr. John Agar dated 10-29-15.This is wrong information. You might have misread Dr. Agar's article. If ones iron levels are too low, then EPO or any other ESA (erythropoiesis-stimulating agents) alone won't help with esrd related anemia. EPO needs iron to replenish red blood cells. I don't like to reinvent the wheel. So, while I couldn't find the article you referred to by using google search, I did find this info from the Kidney School on Anemia and Kidney Disease - http://www.kidneyschool.org/pdfs/KSModule6.pdfOn page 6-5: Anemia and Iron - "There is another key player in the anemia story besides EPO: iron. Iron is the key building block for making red blood cells. Without enough iron, EPO will still signal the bone marrow, but few blood cells will be made. "and this on anemia management from Davita's web site: "If a patient’s hemoglobin does not go up after beginning treatment with an erythropoiesis-stimulating agent, the doctor will recheck iron. Even though there is now a higher level of erythropoietin in the body, there needs to be enough iron for red blood cell production to occur. Vitamin B-12 and folic acid levels must also be in a normal range for healthy red blood cell production to occur." - http://www.davita.com/kidney-disease/overview/treatment-overview/anemia-management-and-chronic-kidney-disease/e/4840Hope this helps. - PatDownsII
When I first went to the ER and was diagnosed with kidney failure, my hemoglobin was at a 2.9. Needless to say, one of the biggest concerns was getting my iron back up. My nephrologist got me a advance sample of auxia - which is a binder with iron added. Didn't work great for my phosphorus personally, but it did get my iron up in conjunction with everything else. I'm at a 12.1 now