I suppose I bypassed the "shock stage" since I saw this coming for years before my doc had "the talk" with me. I've actually been surprised I have been able to retain as much of a quality of life as I am.
Do you do dialysis every night?
QuoteDo you do dialysis every night?I do. Every night. Like clockwork. I'm dry during the days. And yes. In the scheme of things I'm still a newbie.
How long does D take each night? Do you rest & relax while undergoing it? How do you feel when you're finished?
QuoteHow long does D take each night? Do you rest & relax while undergoing it? How do you feel when you're finished?My program is 9+ hours. When it's not sounding alarms, it's very quiet and peaceful. Other than the alarms that go off in the night it's not very intrusive a technology. But I don't sleep that well so I'm always tired in the morning. And because i'm diabetic I am not thriving on the sugar bath that I get every night, all night. I wake up shaky. This wouldn't be true for someone who isn't diabetic--unless PD makes you diabetic which is quite common and kind of taken for granted by the medical team (why not? It's not THEIR body!). Until going on PD I had been officially Type 2, but had been controlling totally through low carb eating and daily walking. Now I can no longer control it so will have to go on drugs--if I don't want to trade kidney failure for blindness or loss of limb, whacked out lipids, etc.. Great trade off. Actually, I think for someone like me hemo would be a better option except for the fact that i'm needle phobic and I have no care partner so HHD is out of the question. But the whole sugar part of PD is really problematic IMHO.
Does PD actually fills you up with glucose/sugar?
Never, ever been normal, so if it slapped me in the face I would not recognize it.
peritoneal dialysis (PD) is a safe and effective treatment in short term (3 to 5 years) for stage 5 chronic kidney disease patients. A major limitation to long-term PD has been peritoneal membrane structural and functional alterations over time, resulting in significant technique failure. Much evidence implicates glucose contained in conventional PD solutions as the major cause of membrane changes. Other harmful characteristics of glucose or its degradation products are thought to cause systemic undesirable metabolic and cardiovascular effects.
The metabolic consequences of glucose-PDF include weight gain, lipid abnormalities, insulin resistance and possibly worsened glycemic control [14]. The glucose content of PDF ranges from 1360 mg/dL to 3860 mg/dL. For a typical patient, PDF glucose is systemically absorbed on the order of about 100-300 g of glucose per day and these calories contribute between 12 and 34% of the daily energy intake of peritoneal dialysis patients. In catabolic or uremic patients these may be welcome calories but other patients, who have uncontrolled diabetes, insulin resistance, or obesity, may not benefit from this excess glucose [15].
I would like to point out that I have always felt that the so called normal people were the most abnormal people I knew.
In other countries they use amino acid-based solutions and bicarbonate solutions of various materials that don't have the same impact on blood sugar. But our FDA doesn't approve these. I think that PD will remain a short-term fix until they have a better handle on this issue. In the meantime, I and all my fellow PDers should be planning for a Plan B intervention because the need is coming. And Type 1 diabetics will need to "cover" all the extra sugar with insulin. There are very few options for Type 2's if they don't want to use insulin (I'm one of them). I will see an Endo in a week or so to discuss the possibilities. Meanwhile, since being on PD, my HbA1c has moved from 6 to 6.7. Not a good trend.
So what sort of needles are used in Hemodialysis? Would you have to insert a needle into your arm? Are there community type of nurses that can do that for you each evening?
I'm not supposed to be abnormal... not in my book. I can go through the day with the illusion/delusion that I'm just living an ordinary life. But every night as I go to hook up to my machine, it hits me. Again. Right between the eyes. I live in the world of the abnormal-- people who need to take drastic measures in order to stay alive. Most of the time I can accommodate this change to my self image. But some days I just can't. Today is such a day. Today, I'm just fixated on the daily slog that dialysis is. It's not horrible. It's just not how I imagined I would be spending my life at this stage of the game.