Good luck with the xplant. I got mine 6 years and 4 months on the list, type O-.
Best wishes with the dialysis process! I hope that you start to feel better soon (nausea and edema) and you stay as healthy as possible. Take care and good luck!
Same around here Kathymac, 6-8 year wait with type A blood. Hope everything goes well for you and a transplant comes sooner rather than later. Best advice is to educate yourself as best as possible so you know what questions to ask the doctors, nurses and techs.
Good luck and best wishes to you, Kathymac2. You sound educated and prepared, and that's half the battle. I'm hoping that dialysis will keep you in good shape and will merely act as a bridge until you get your transplant.
When I started, the buried catheter didn't exist yet. I remember asking about having it put in earlier, so that it would be there when I needed it, and the doctor I asked said no. He told me that if the catheter is not used, it can clog up. But then, that was about 20 years ago.For fiberin, all I really had to do was one twin bag exchange a month with heparin added. That seemed to work well for me. That first time the catheter was used after it healed, though, scary. The fibrin the fiberin that was coming out, it looked like pieces of wood. That was only for the first couple of exchanges, though.PD was great. I'd go back to it in a heartbeat if I could.
Quote from: Riki on February 04, 2019, 11:46:36 AMWhen I started, the buried catheter didn't exist yet. I remember asking about having it put in earlier, so that it would be there when I needed it, and the doctor I asked said no. He told me that if the catheter is not used, it can clog up. But then, that was about 20 years ago.For fiberin, all I really had to do was one twin bag exchange a month with heparin added. That seemed to work well for me. That first time the catheter was used after it healed, though, scary. The fibrin the fiberin that was coming out, it looked like pieces of wood. That was only for the first couple of exchanges, though.PD was great. I'd go back to it in a heartbeat if I could.
Pay STRICT Attention during Training.Make double sure your hands are CLEAN and thaat NOTHING EVER Touches any fitting. Your Transfer Set or and bag hoses, anywhere.I did 3 1/2 great years on PD until I inadvertantly must hav 'touched' something during my set-up. I was in the ER long before morning. Infeection grows that fast and that bad. Long story shorter. My cath had to come out and I've been on Hemo almost 2 1/2 years. Still doing well. But have to stay way careful with diet and fluids now.On PD I was allowed anything, everything, and could drink like I Fish!I sorta miss that a LOT!Stay Safe!
If you do not have an emergency antibiotic kit from your clinic, ask for one. I was not offered one, but when I asked it was readily forthcoming.When I was on PD I had a vial of Vanco and two of (I think gentamycin). The procedure was to get clearance from on-call RN first but to(a) Save the first drain bag which will be cloudy(b) Do several rinses with PD fluid (get number and dwell time from RN) to reduce the concentration of bacteria in the abdominal cavity(c) Mix antibiotics with sterile saline (provided in vials), inject into bag, drain abdomen and fill with this drugged bag(d) Report to nearest ER for insurance verification and treatment, taking that first bag of drainage with you for lab testing. Bring empty antibiotic vials with you since the staff will not know you and if they can rely on your self-report on dosing.The one dose will not cure the infection, but if you are stuck in an ER waiting room for a few hours, you will already be started on your treatment rather than welcoming the new baby bacteria born into the families living in your gut. They reproduce faster than undocumented immigrants. This is doubly important if you are traveling as there may be more delays in finding an ER, having them contact your doc, etc.