The dialysis coordinator seemed to suggest that Peritoneal Dialysis (PD) seems to be the best option. I was shown a photo of a man who travels with PD & who leads a very active life. He seemed to look quite healthy. But that catheter tube that will stick out of one's abdomen is not ideal - it looks risky where infections are concerned. And the thought of having all that extra fluid in the abdominal cavity seems debilitating (for one thing, the missionary sexual position would be unviable because of abdominal pressure). …In the meantime, should I get the flu vaccine? I've never bothered with this thing before as I've not been prone to getting serious colds or flu. I've had a pretty good immune system. I am worried about any serious reactions to the flu vax - I seem to be becoming paranoid & anxious about the concept of being injected with chemicals lately.
But from everything I have learned - the pancreas tx is very risky to me because if the new pancreas fails - I can't go back to my native pancreas (which functions normally except for the deficient insulin cells). I wonder what your thoughts are on this UkrainianTracksuit?
My nephrologist is literally on the board of directors for my disease (PKD). She was the chief science adviser for five years
Athena,Okay, so, reading your post from a couple months ago now, I do have some thoughts for you to consider. I just don't frequent here very much.First of all, I too went to transplant eval recently. August. They were then, and still am today, shocked that I am not on dialysis. My egfr is around 17-18% and I only have one kidney!We are in similar places, except I am younger (46). I still lift weights (compound barbells, the real stuff) three times a week. Just today I squatted 3 sets of 195 lbs for 8 reps for my core lift. Then did 3 sets of 10 seated overhead presses at 75 lbs right after. Then I went to the easier stuff.I get to yoga as often as my schedule allows (twice a week, most weeks). I walk a fair bit still.My blood type is B+, which means I'm going to have a long, long wait for a cadaver kidney. Sucks.Anyway - I would suggest that, although I don't believe you should categorically refuse dialysis, I wouldn't necessarily let them force you onto it either. For the record, and I've told the doctors this - I'm going to fight to go without dialysis as long as I possibly can. I've read people functioning adequately at 8-10% eGFR. Everyone is different, and in my experience so far, very, VERY few people are as fit as I am. Additionally, there's not a single other health related problem of consequence, outside of the standard kidney related stuff. I just did an echo two weeks ago and crushed it. Got my BPM to a steady 160 and felt my knees would give out before my heart ever would. I was at like 15-16 on the borg scale at the very end. Also, I too have been recommended that an 'average' protein diet is fine. My nephrologist is literally on the board of directors for my disease (PKD). She was the chief science adviser for five years. I am 170 lbs and she wants me at 65-75g protein a day. Many days I'm under simply because the process of eating low salt, low potassium, and now lower phosphorus really makes eating healthy a struggle. Never mind maintaining muscle mass.I will add that as far as animal protein goes, my neph did suggest keeping it limited.You sound like a fighter. Keep fighting. It's hard, I have dark days and short periods of time. It sucks. However, I rebound. Because surrendering only expedites the problems. To hell with that.
When those who maintain a fitness routine are stricken by an illness, they are likely to have better outcomes than those with a similar illness who are out of shape