Regeneration of scar tissue may not be impossible, but very near it.I like to think that man can eventually find a way to overcome most any problem. But this has got to be one of the toughest.I don't remember where I read it, but it was within the last couple of months that I saw a short note on research that is being done on this very subject. And they are having some small measure of success. No way are they willing to advertise this as they do not want to build false hopes in so many current renal patients literally dying on dialysis from other medical issues also brought about from renal failure.Hopefully, someday. Just not yet today.
For all those who have ever read any of my posts, I am someone in pre-dialysis CKD who certainly wants to avoid dialysis. I totally share the spirit of this site - which is that no one likes or wants to be dependent on dialysis (or more precisely, to be in end-stage renal failure).I have searched far and wide to find any promising new medical research initiatives that may prevent or delay a CKD patient from ever reaching ESRF and have found very little. Kidney advocacy groups only seemed attached to the notion of better dialysis or transplants as the answer. But very few people (outside of elite research institutions) even stop to consider that a cure or new therapies that might stop, halt and even repair damaged kidneys is even possible, much less something that medical science should be looking to discover. If patients, carers and kidney advocacy groups don't demand better medical treatments, who's going to be persuading governments and medical science to find these better treatments? No one!With millions and gazillions of people worldwide being at some stage of CKD, isn't it time a new revolutionary focus was made on actually preventing so many people from ending up on dialysis and actually finding ways to keep people's kidneys healthy and strong in the face of so many threats that seem to exist?I welcome any constructive comments and opinions about how such an advocacy group might be formed and how it might operate, or whether such groups already exist. All ideas, thoughts and opinions on this topic are welcome.
Regeneration of scar tissue may not be impossible, but very near itHopefully, someday. Just not yet today.
How long where you aware of being in pre-dialysis CKD? I'd really like to know hear from as many people as possible about how long they have lived with CKD before starting dialysis/transplant. I think in most cases, the wait was for many years.
I have searched far and wide to find any promising new medical research initiatives that may prevent or delay a CKD patient from ever reaching ESRF and have found very little. Kidney advocacy groups only seemed attached to the notion of better dialysis or transplants as the answer. But very few people (outside of elite research institutions) even stop to consider that a cure or new therapies that might stop, halt and even repair damaged kidneys is even possible, much less something that medical science should be looking to discover. If patients, carers and kidney advocacy groups don't demand better medical treatments, who's going to be persuading governments and medical science to find these better treatments? No one!
Below is an article that reiterates the topic of this post: "Kidney disease doesn’t get the attention, funding or concern associated with cancers of the breast or prostate. But it actually kills more Americans — 90,000 a year — than both malignancies combined.Even when it is not fatal, the cost of treating end-stage kidney disease through dialysis or a kidney transplant is astronomical, more than fivefold what Medicare pays annually for the average patient over age 65. The charges do not include the inestimable costs to quality of life among patients with advanced kidney disease.Much is known about who faces the greatest risks of developing chronic kidney disease and how it can be prevented, detected in its early stages, and treated to slow or halt its " you can click on the link below to read the rest of the articlehttp://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/07/15/kidney-disease-an-underestimated-killer/?_r=0BTW, diet and exercise and early screenings is suggested as key for treating most CHD conditions.
I think one of the reasons that CKD is an "orphan" in the field of research money allocation is the demographics and politics involved. A very high % of CKD patients are people of color and people of very modest financial means. So it's very easy for the powers that be to write them/us off. Or even worse, to blame the victim. If we were a "tonier" group overall, there might be more concern about us and more money flowing to research to help us. In this very uncompassionate political climate--social darwinist at best--it probably won't be long before our treatment is no longer supported. And we are just left to die in the dust.
I think, in general, that the kidneys are the Rodney Dangerfield of organs. They don't get no respect. And Nephrologists are getting rarer and harder to recruit. And yet kidneys are enormously complex organs that perform a huge range of very subtle regulation. They balance. They produce blood. They regulate fluids. They clear toxins. They regulate electrolytes and minerals. And on and on. And yet no one ever thinks about them until they go kaput. CKD is a "silent" disease... until it isn't. I'll bet there are a ton of people walking around who have NO idea they have deteriorating kidneys. Most people are never tested. I'm diabetic, so creatinine was part of my regular testing. But without symptoms and without a related, causal condition there is no reason for anyone to know (until it's too late) that they are part of our unfortunate demographic.
Here's what we're up against. http://www.renalweb.com/writings/StagnantDialysis.htm
A renal nurse looked at me recently & whispered: "There are some really sinister financial incentives that will keep the research you want out of reach".