Common enough that an eyeball doc I know social saw me with a cane and asked what's up? I aid AVN and his response was "steroids, right?".
QuoteCommon enough that an eyeball doc I know social saw me with a cane and asked what's up? I aid AVN and his response was "steroids, right?".So does that make you hesitate about using steroids so routinely as is done for transplants?
Many Tx hospitals across the nation are now steroid free. I only took Prednidone for the first 5 days after Tx and that was it! Now my creatinine is 1.34 and my Tx team says the kidney is working perfectly! The difference between a transplant and depending on a MACHINE to live is the difference between LIFE & death! And I don't need to tell you which is which! 😁☺
Quote from: DialysisGoneFOREVER on September 10, 2016, 08:22:07 AMMany Tx hospitals across the nation are now steroid free. I only took Prednidone for the first 5 days after Tx and that was it! Now my creatinine is 1.34 and my Tx team says the kidney is working perfectly! The difference between a transplant and depending on a MACHINE to live is the difference between LIFE & death! And I don't need to tell you which is which! 😁☺The center I am listed at uses that protocol as well. I was on a heavy dose of prednisone for a month (started at 100mg) and my hip died a year later.
I was only on steroids for 4 or 5 days. I REALLY doubt steroids for that short of a time would kill off a hip. There is quite a difference between 4 to 5 days and a month. It seems a bit of an anomaly to take steroids for a month but the hip dies a year later??
This thread is so helpful and assuring. I'm waiting to hear back on the final results of my potential live donors, and this is constantly on my mind. I know the transplant is better than the dialysis, and I'm bound to experience at least some unpleasant side effects from the meds, and it's assuring to see that for the most part the effects are manageable. In fact, the first question I asked in my transplant consultation was how long would they want to keep me on Prednisone - and thankfully my transplant center is one that tries to get you off it as soon as they can.
This app takes some basic information about age, gender, health and calculates your chances of dying every year, with a transplant or dialysis. The numbers are clear prof of the value of a transplant.
My tx neph explained to me that the immune system is made up of "doors" and that each "door" works in its own unique way to keep out the bad guys. So, instead of giving you massive doses of one drug that would only affect the function of one door, you are given much smaller doses of different drugs, each drug working to keep a different door halfway shut (ie, suppressing the immune system).