My husband won't even put his name on the list for a transplant. he feels too good now!!! he is afraid that if he has a transplant he will not be as well as he is now. He does nocturnal hemo and his bloodwork is basically "normal". There are very few if any food and fluid restrictions. He sleeps through his treatment so that he does not lose any time out of his day. Nephs basically agree with him. Transplant is only another type of treatment not a cure.
... dialysis can be so intrusive a therapy that it destroys the value of life in order to allow the patient to live -- which is as ugly a paradox as you can find in medicine ...
since while a renal transplant allows patients to live a normal existence while it lasts, dialysis can be so intrusive a therapy that it destroys the value of life in order to allow the patient to live --
The quality of life on dialysis depends to a large extent on how the patient had conceived his life beforehand and what he needs to do to follow his own lifeplan. A young person accustomed to a very busy, highly competitive life and many projects which require energy and travel could be devastated by dialysis, while a senior citizen who was planning to do nothing but sit on the front porch and count the out-of-state license plates on the cars going by might find dialysis makes little difference. What is an expert travelling salesman supposed to do when he is struck down by kidney disease?
The quality of life on dialysis depends to a large extent on how the patient had conceived his life beforehand and what he needs to do to follow his own lifeplan. A young person accustomed to a very busy, highly competitive life and many projects which require energy and travel could be devastated by dialysis, while a senior citizen who was planning to do nothing but sit on the front porch and count the out-of-state license plates on the cars going by might find dialysis makes little difference. What is an expert travelling salesman supposed to do when he is struck down by kidney disease?The extremely high suicide rate among dialysis patients, the high prevalence of depression, the large number of patients who voluntarily withdraw from dialysis to die (for some absurd reason these cases are not counted as suicides, though of course they are), and the very title of this website, all show how negatively dialysis affects most people.
Wasn't able to read the original paper.However it seems it might be one of them things of science not looking at the whole picture when comparing deceased donor transplants to dialysis in any form.That being while mortality rates might be similar in transplants to daily hemo. Are the deaths actually laid out to what was the cause. It seems I read once that many deaths after transplant were not actually related to the tx itself but other causes.
For those who want a transplant higher doses of dialysis will keep you healthier so that when a kidney comes your way you'll have a greater chance of a long time together. Also something to think about is high doses of dialysis will keep you thriving until a medical change makes transplant more appealing if for some reason you find the current kidney transplant industrial complex less than appealing.