Triathlete inspires dialysis patients to live a full lifeBy LIZ FREEMAN
Sunday, June 29, 2008
They were two strangers sitting at a table discussing what is important to them and God.
Three decades apart in age was bridged by the emotional and physical challenge of kidney failure, with both men dependant on dialysis three times a week.
Shad Ireland, a 36-year-old Ironman triathlete from Minnesota, came to Naples Artificial Kidney Center recently to inspire other dialysis patients, like 67-year-old Tom Mancinelli, that leading a full life doesn’t have to come to an end because of dialysis.
“All our stories are important,” Ireland said, a spokesman for Fresenius Medical Care Inc., which owns the Naples center and 1,650 dialysis centers in the United States. He travels around the country and talks with dialysis patients about taking control of their lives. “We are learning from each other.”
Mancinelli of Naples, who has been on dialysis for 1 1⁄2 years, said staying positive is not always easy but he tries. His faith in God helps.
“You never give up. You have to fight to stay alive,” said Mancinelli, whose kidney failure is the result of radiation treatment 21 years ago for non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma. “Life is not always that easy.”
Ireland, who grew up near Minneapolis, was diagnosed with kidney failure when he was 10 and he needed dialysis until he could have a liver transplant. He had a transplant at 18 but it failed and he went into a coma. His parents were told to prepare for his funeral. He came out of the coma, but he was full of anger that he was cheated in life. He was told he likely wouldn’t live past 25.
“I spent 13 months on my mother’s couch,” he said. “I was 75 pounds. It was the lowest point in my life. I was cursing God. Why did I have to go through this.”
One day he saw a program on television about Ironman triathletes and decided he was going to become one.
“It took 24 months to weigh 80 pounds,” he said. “I woke up on my 25th birthday and wondered why I was still here.”
He went to college and took his anger with him. A philosophy professor began to turn his life around, teaching him and other students how to have perspective in life. Soon afterward, he saw a man a wheelchair paralyzed from the neck down, who smiled at him in passing. That drove home to Ireland that his life wasn’t so bad.
“I realized at least I had dialysis to connect to. I had the chip off my shoulder,” he said.
He graduated from college and accepted a job as network engineer in the Minneapolis area. One night, drunk with friends, he decided to live up to his promise of becoming an Ironman triathlete.
“I was 90 pounds and had been on dialysis for 20 years,” he said. “My biceps were the size of a quarter.”
He told his skeptical doctor of his plans and started going to a gym. At first he could only walk two minutes on a treadmill but he stuck with it. Six months later, a trainer agreed to work with him.
In 2004, Ireland entered an Ironman triathlon event in Lake Placid, N.Y., and finished, becoming the first dialysis patient to complete a triathlon.
He had found his calling in life, to convince other dialysis patients that with planning they can travel, take part in sports and live a full life. They can take control of their lives by watching their diet, taking their medications, watching their laboratory results and exercise, now matter how little at first.
Exercise helps against the vicious cycle of feeling tired and developing cardiac conditions. His foundation, the Shad Ireland Foundation, helps dialysis patients fulfill their goals and incorporate fitness for healthy living.
“It’s functional exercise,” he said. “This disease tends to be overwhelming. There are things you can do to take back your life.”
Marilyn and Wiliam Caithness of Venice listened intently to Ireland, asking if he uses a portable dialysis machine for travel. Marilyn Caithness, 77, has been on dialysis since 2005. The couple likes to take cruises and they came to the Naples dialysis center because of Ireland’s visit.
Ireland does not use a portable dialysis machine; he has learned to plan his traveling around dialysis. Fresenius does have a “dialysis at sea” program, he said.
“The bottom line is you can travel,” Ireland said.
Mancinelli, the 67-year-old dialysis patient from Naples and New York, said Ireland’s story was interesting.
“And at an early age (to have kidney failure), that had got to be tough,” he said. “And here I was feeling sorry for myself.”
For more information about Shad Ireland and his foundation, go to his Web site,
www.ironshad.comhttp://www.naplesnews.com/news/2008/jun/29/dialysis-patients-inspire-others-themselves/