hi i am about to start dialyisiis in a few months , i just had the fistula put in two weeks ago . doctor wanted it to mature before i started. i also have congestive heart failure inoperable and i am in hospice . but not commited to it LOL. i would like to know what to expect , how do i choose a dialyisis center , or does doctor do it. i will probably have a lot more questions but thats it for now. so glad you put this site up.
i am having a terrible time with itching around the incision . if i start scratching i feel like i am a madman. i have tried putting benydrl on it but only stops it for a while. the skin is getting raw around it from scratching. i try not too but just have to sometimes. doctor told me hand might become numb and true to form it is . any ideas what to put on it or what to do. this is driving me beserk . sort of lol.
Do not use the Capasin if you have any open wounds from your scratching. I did and it burned the hell out of me. It is made of hot peppers, and it is like getting it in your eyes if you have been cooking. I had to put ice all over me because of that Capasin cream.
well i found out the problem was i am allergic to the sutures so have to put this stuff on that burns to high heaven but stops the itching.
Whenever I get 'dialysis itch' (whole body), I take a nice, long, HOT shower. While in the shower, I scrape off all the dead skin-- in my case, that's what causes the itchiness, NOT 'high phosphorus' as the nurses at dialysis insisted it was... my phosphorus leves are within normal range.Since we have fluid restrictions, our skin is usually dry-- and dry skin builds up and can make you very itchy. Sometimes moisturizers work, sometimes they just make you itchier. I've found that a good 'debriding' in the shower eliminates most of the problem.
I think you should try to continue teaching as long as possible-- it's important to keep up your outside interests so that dialysis doesn't become your life.For the first few months you may be too tired after dialysis to do very much-- would it be possible to move the lessons up by 30 or 60 minutes, to give you longer to recover from dialysis? It's important to have a meal containing protein when you get home from dialysis, since the procedure takes a lot of protein out of your blood... and you'll probably need a rest after your treatment, too, before you teach your class.Good luck!
I have so many interests and favorite things to do, that I am not ready to give it up yet.
If you have a couple years to go i wouldn't stress over it so much. Stress is a major killer.And if your truly worried and vain about how your arm may end up looking do PD.P&K
Paul: I'm embarassed that you thought it was vanity. Actually I'm pushing 69 years old here and little left to be vain about. It is, however, a very real phobia. I did start reading about the PD...but I doubt it...Quote from: paul.karen on March 16, 2009, 08:00:34 AMIf you have a couple years to go i wouldn't stress over it so much. Stress is a major killer.And if your truly worried and vain about how your arm may end up looking do PD.P&K
I take it that most people say the fistala is the way to go. That is what my doctor is planning for me. Realistically how much does it limit your activities -- after it heals and you start to use it I mean. I'm talking lifting, bathing, fist fights. My most important hobby is the piano. Will I have to stop? Will vanity insist you wear a long sleeve shirt all the time?
Also I'd like to know about people experience driving after the sessions. Are you too week (large city with lots of traffic). I've call all kinds of services for transportion and they are quite expensive.
Finally, I wish someone would simply say "I would" or "I would not" do dialysis if I lived alone and I am only a year or so shy of 70? I know the phrase that "no one can tell you what to do". I wish someone would try and put themselves in this position and not tell me what to do but surmise what they might do.