There are different types of kidney loss. Some lose the ability to produce urine at all. Others lose the ability to flush creatine making dialysis necessary.
My kidney damage was from active lupus in the early 1990's which continued to scar until dialysis in 2013. So on 3.5 years on dialysis I never lost the ability to urinate and feel that I also had some residual kidney function helping things. I still had the normal challenges with phosphorous, PTH and the like but it made things easier. So hope that you keep peeing, at a minimum it helps keep off the water weight.
Quote from: iolaire on March 11, 2018, 04:40:07 PMMy kidney damage was from active lupus in the early 1990's which continued to scar until dialysis in 2013. So on 3.5 years on dialysis I never lost the ability to urinate and feel that I also had some residual kidney function helping things. I still had the normal challenges with phosphorous, PTH and the like but it made things easier. So hope that you keep peeing, at a minimum it helps keep off the water weight. Hello iolaire and sorry about the Lupus damaging your "original" kidneys. I am in two minds about my own kidney failure because at first, one year after they recovered a bit from the first kidney failure, after I was strong enough, I was diagnosed with chronic proliferative Glomerulonephritis ( through a kidney-biopsy), but many years later I was also diagnosed with SLE/MCTD plus a few other diseases connected to SLE and MCTD like Sicca, Sjoegren's, Vasculitis etc.I would like to learn more about whether the Lupus has been known to "attack" a transplanted kidney in a flare-up ? And how does a Lupus-body generally accept a kidney-transplantation? Are there more flare-ups after a transplant to be expected? I am asking because I have read years ago, that there could be complications in a transplanted kidney because of the Lupus? Are your medications worked out by the nephrologist and the rheumatologist in "unison" or is it all in the hands of a nephrologist ? As you can imagine, I am a bit nervous about it all, especially since being on the waiting-list...Many thanks for your kind answers from Kristina.
at a minimum it helps keep off the water weight.
I'm around 15 months on Hemo after 3 1/2 years on PD. I still made a little bit of urine daily, maybe a half liter at most, I'm guessing. Since my clinic is MWF my 'wettest' day is Sunday and I seem to make almost twice as much as I will than any other day of the week. Seems when I get to about 2 liters over my dry weight my kidneys decide they need to start doing something. Not a lot, but something. Almost a whole liter on Sundays.