Quote from: okarol on August 28, 2007, 05:38:43 PMI believe two other risk factors with a transplant are skin cancer and developing Type 2 diabetes.Well, I've already got type 1 diabetes, so the risk if type 2 has already been eliminated, and I've never burned or even been able to get a sun tan a day in my life, so I'm pretty sure that eliminates the skin cancer too!
I believe two other risk factors with a transplant are skin cancer and developing Type 2 diabetes.
your kidney is fine now. will you sing the same tune if it fails and you have to go back to dialysis?
pbear, my transplant doc said they almost expect a transplant patient to get skin cancer - staying out of the sun will help, but the odds are good you're going to get it anyhow.
the list of people who have a transplant and have the new kidney fail in a few years is very long, too.there are too many factors to make such a decision based on only one person's experience.your kidney is fine now. will you sing the same tune if it fails and you have to go back to dialysis?i don't know if you tried the baxter cycler or not. but i find it quite reliable, as far as keeping my energy level up. i tend to side with del's hubby; 'if it ain't broke, don't fix it.'so far, that is....
Quote from: paddbear0000 on August 29, 2007, 05:23:40 AMQuote from: okarol on August 28, 2007, 05:38:43 PMI believe two other risk factors with a transplant are skin cancer and developing Type 2 diabetes.Well, I've already got type 1 diabetes, so the risk if type 2 has already been eliminated, and I've never burned or even been able to get a sun tan a day in my life, so I'm pretty sure that eliminates the skin cancer too! pbear, my transplant doc said they almost expect a transplant patient to get skin cancer - staying out of the sun will help, but the odds are good you're going to get it anyhow.
To say that the transplanted kidney might fail is no argument against he superiority of a transplant to dialysis. The statistics show that the average kidney transplanted from a cadaver lasts 12 years, while the average kidney from a living donor lasts 24 years. Both of those graft survival times are longer than my entire life expectancy was on dialysis.Anecdotal evidence doesn't mean anything compared to the statistics, which are all that you have to judge by if you are reasoning on an objective basis. There may be a merchant in the Congo who is a millionaire, but that doesn't mean it's a good idea to move from the United States to the Congo to get rich! You look instead at the statistics, which says that the average income in the U.S. is $43,000 a year, while the average income in the Congo is $1200 a year, and make your decision on the averages.
Now, to clarify the analysis, suppose you could pick one of two hospitals to have a major operation, and one had double the operation success rate of the other. Would you remain undecided on which hospital to pick on the theory that "you never know what may happen"?! Sure, you could be very unlucky at the better hospital or very lucky at the worse hospital, but you have to judge by the averages.
Here is some additional wood to put on the fire:More Kidney Transplants Are Failinghttp://www.medicineonline.com/news/10/1734/More-Kidney-Transplants-Are-Failing.html
Patients who have had a kidney transplant face higher melanoma riskhttp://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/31177.php
You can find a full table of statistics for the varying life expectancies of people with endstage renal failure according to age group, presence of absence of diabetes, and treatment modality (transplant or dialysis) in a medical text by Professor Gabriel Danovitch, Handbook of Kidney Transplant (Philadelphia: Lippincott, 2001) p. 16.
Quote from: stauffenberg on August 28, 2007, 11:12:20 AMYou can find a full table of statistics for the varying life expectancies of people with endstage renal failure according to age group, presence of absence of diabetes, and treatment modality (transplant or dialysis) in a medical text by Professor Gabriel Danovitch, Handbook of Kidney Transplant (Philadelphia: Lippincott, 2001) p. 16. And the above is not old? to you okarol!