i've pretty much decided a tpransplant is out of the question, for me.i have yet to have a 'sit-down' with my nephrologist on the subject, but there isn't much he could say that would change my thinking on this.
i too have decided against a transplant. at my age, 56, it just doesn't seem necessary, not to mention financially responsible. i mean, if i could go back to work full time next year, just how easy would it be to find a decent job. I'd rather just not have to deal with it. now if i were in my 20's or even 40's there would be no question.
Dialysis is only as good as your access. Right now mine has quit. I try to get the declot procedure tomorrow. Transplants are great but there are still worries everyday and the fear of the day it starts to lose function. Could be years, but the fear is always lurking over your shoulder.Since I quit my job to go on disability if I get a transplant then Society calls me cured and I get kicked off disability in 12 months and expected to rush out and get a job with benefits. That scares me out of really wanting another transplant.
Quote from: thegrammalady on August 30, 2007, 04:33:24 PMi too have decided against a transplant. at my age, 56, it just doesn't seem necessary, not to mention financially responsible. i mean, if i could go back to work full time next year, just how easy would it be to find a decent job. I'd rather just not have to deal with it. now if i were in my 20's or even 40's there would be no question.56 seems young, my parents are 55 and 56... I don't consider them old to no means. If my transplant for some reason don't last the rest of my life, I'm only 28, I will opt for another one... I don't consider a person to be too old for a transplant until they reach the point of they don't know whats going on and delusional and cant take care of themselves.i don't consider myself old either, i still don't know what i want to do when i grow up. however, that doesn't mean others don't consider me too old to hire. when you can put a job on monster and get 500 qualified applicants in a day you choose someone in there 20's not their 50's who you think is going to want to retire in a few years. i'm just being practical.[/quote}I still respect your decision though Just wanted to say I don't consider you too old for anything EDITED: Fixed quote tag error- kitkatz,moderator
While the normal intuition is to think that having an operation is always a greater risk than doing nothing, in the case of a dialysis patient considering transplant surgery, the greater risk is in not having the operation, since staying on dialysis presents a greater risk of declining health and premature death than having a transplant does. A kidney transplant operation is an old procedure, having been first performed more than half a century ago, and has a very low death rate of one in 3000. The yearly death rate of patients on dialysis varies between 9% and 26% in first-world dialysis centers, depending on the country.I don't understand the argument that if my transplant were to fail after working only a short time, I would prefer to have remained on dialysis. Why would anyone prefer not to spend any period of time feeling more alert, more energetic, more healthy, and being more free, even if that period of time were short? Why would I prefer the misery I endured on dialysis to have lasted longer just so as to avoid the disappointment of my reprieve from that misery being shorter than expected?It also makes no sense to me that someone would not want a transplant because of advanced age, as long as a transplant was still medically advisable. Don't you want to feel more alive, more energetic, more productive, as well as having a longer life expectancy, regardless of age? If a transplant were a huge undertaking requiring enormous effort and many years of struggle to accomplish before the investment paid off, then being older might be a reason for not finding it a sensible alternative. But a transplant operation takes only four hours of your time during which you experience nothing, plus about a week in the hospital, followed by another three months of more intensive diagnostic testing and more numerous medical appointments. But even in the month of the transplant itself, a patient will be less bothered by medical interventions than he normally would be on dialysis. So if the patient's investment of time and energy in a transplant is so small compared to that required for continuing on dialysis, what on earth does being older have to do with not wanting a transplant so as to live better, which you start to do within minutes of waking up from the procedure?
Quote from: stauffenberg on August 31, 2007, 10:11:21 AMWhile the normal intuition is to think that having an operation is always a greater risk than doing nothing, in the case of a dialysis patient considering transplant surgery, the greater risk is in not having the operation, since staying on dialysis presents a greater risk of declining health and premature death than having a transplant does. A kidney transplant operation is an old procedure, having been first performed more than half a century ago, and has a very low death rate of one in 3000. The yearly death rate of patients on dialysis varies between 9% and 26% in first-world dialysis centers, depending on the country.I don't understand the argument that if my transplant were to fail after working only a short time, I would prefer to have remained on dialysis. Why would anyone prefer not to spend any period of time feeling more alert, more energetic, more healthy, and being more free, even if that period of time were short? Why would I prefer the misery I endured on dialysis to have lasted longer just so as to avoid the disappointment of my reprieve from that misery being shorter than expected?It also makes no sense to me that someone would not want a transplant because of advanced age, as long as a transplant was still medically advisable. Don't you want to feel more alive, more energetic, more productive, as well as having a longer life expectancy, regardless of age? If a transplant were a huge undertaking requiring enormous effort and many years of struggle to accomplish before the investment paid off, then being older might be a reason for not finding it a sensible alternative. But a transplant operation takes only four hours of your time during which you experience nothing, plus about a week in the hospital, followed by another three months of more intensive diagnostic testing and more numerous medical appointments. But even in the month of the transplant itself, a patient will be less bothered by medical interventions than he normally would be on dialysis. So if the patient's investment of time and energy in a transplant is so small compared to that required for continuing on dialysis, what on earth does being older have to do with not wanting a transplant so as to live better, which you start to do within minutes of waking up from the procedure?wrong. i see my doctor about once every three months now, since i've been on home, peritoneal dialysis. i go for bloodwork once a month, and any adjustment to my meds is discussed over the phone, with my dialysis team.the fact FOR ME is that having hep C means I would only be allowed to receive a kidney that was hep C-infected. Its very likely, and the stats confirm this, that a transplant with a hep C kidney would re-activate the virus in me and because of the condition of one immediately after the transplant operation, it would most likely kill me very quickly. your argument may hold water for one without hep C, or other life-threatening issues, but not for me.nice try, though.
... less time taken off of work for doctor's appointments & labwork ... twice a month now), ...