Guest guest Posted August 12, 2005 Report Share Posted August 12, 2005 In a message dated 8/12/2005 12:45:35 P.M. Central Daylight Time, pgl-groups@... writes: a few people might need to do dialysis in the hospital afterwards if the new kidney is slow to start working. Coming out of lurker mode to answer this. When I was transplanted, the need for postoperative dialysis (dialysis after a transplant) was quite common because it generally took a while for the transplant to start working. Of course, that was in the late 1970s, and things are different now. Robin s Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 12, 2005 Report Share Posted August 12, 2005 Does everyone have to spend some time on dialysis or can you go straight to transplant? , you said you were at 20% when Barb gave you her kidney, were you every on dialysis? Jill G. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 12, 2005 Report Share Posted August 12, 2005 If it is planned ahead of time as a pre-emptive transplant, and your kidney function doesn't drop dramatically before the surgery can be scheduled, you go straight to transplant without ever being on dialysis. The only exception is that in some cases, depending on the results of the bloodwork, they might want to do a hemodialysis treatment before the surgery to drop the potassium level to normal, and a few people might need to do dialysis in the hospital afterwards if the new kidney is slow to start working. Pierre Do you have to do dialysis or can you go straigt to tx? > Does everyone have to spend some time on dialysis or can you go > straight to transplant? , you said you were at 20% when Barb gave > you her kidney, were you every on dialysis? > > Jill G. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 12, 2005 Report Share Posted August 12, 2005 Jill: I was at 20% when I started my evaluation for getting a donation, not at the time of the surgery. At 20% you qualify under most medical plans as able to be listed on the UNOS list. Before that, the testing may not be covered, and it can run big bucks. Also, UNOS would probably not list you before that point because of the number of people already at that point or worse (it's around 70,000 in the US). If you have a potential donor, I would highly recommend the pre-emptive tx like I did (meaning that you skip dialysis). It's one less event your body needs to go through, and I was told the recovery is the fastest and easiest this way (although the patients from dialysis usually feel a bit more 'better', but that is due to the fact that they had already reached dialysis). By the time my surgery rolled around, my function was in the low teens. If you asked if I felt different at 20%, it's tough to say. The changes were gradual for me and I never noticed (others did). Jill aj72300@...> wrote: Does everyone have to spend some time on dialysis or can you go straight to transplant? , you said you were at 20% when Barb gave you her kidney, were you every on dialysis? Jill G. To edit your settings for the group, go to our Yahoo Group home page: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/iga-nephropathy/ To unsubcribe via email, iga-nephropathy-unsubscribe Visit our companion website at www.igan.ca. The site is entirely supported by donations. If you would like to help, go to: http://www.igan.ca/id62.htm Thank you Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 12, 2005 Report Share Posted August 12, 2005 Hi Jill, I'm at 13%, but no dialysis. My neph seems very focussed on preemptive transplant and never having to do the dialysis, so I've had the transplant evaluation but we have not planned for dialysis access. So I'm hoping I won't need to have dialysis ever. Sophia > Does everyone have to spend some time on dialysis or can you go > straight to transplant? , you said you were at 20% when Barb gave > you her kidney, were you every on dialysis? > > Jill G. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 12, 2005 Report Share Posted August 12, 2005 Jill, I have not yet started dialysis and have been on the transplant list for two months, as of tomorrow. If I had a potential donor that was a match and finished all the testing with flying colors the surgery could be scheduled within the next 3-6 weeks. So, No, you don't have to be on dialysis to get a transplant. Kathleen > Does everyone have to spend some time on dialysis or can you go > straight to transplant? , you said you were at 20% when Barb gave > you her kidney, were you every on dialysis? > > Jill G. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 12, 2005 Report Share Posted August 12, 2005 HI Robin, We have not heard from you in a long time. How are you doing these days? In a message dated 8/12/2005 10:58:57 A.M. Pacific Daylight Time, KidneyKd@... writes: Robin s Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 14, 2005 Report Share Posted August 14, 2005 Jill, to add to Kathleen's point, my neph is emphatic re two things: Living donors are to be highly preferred, being that even a poor match generally will behave and last longer than a perfect cadaveric one; and that transplantation before dialysis begins is also highly preferred....the heterograft tends to last longer whether cadaveric or living. The problem of course is that kidneys are in short supply (relative to livers and hearts, where the average wait times are a couple months), the average wait here in Texas being some 5 years for a cadaver donation. As far as I can detect, many physicians are advocating earlier dialysis starts than formerly.....of course dialysis is " easier, " to perform than ever before....at inception, this was done only in hospital, only under anesthesia, and by means of glass catheters inserted into great veins (of course this is early 60's medicine if I remember rightly). The same appears to be true of transplants....with the advent of FK506 (cyclosporine) survival rates have improved dramatically for all solid organ transplant classes. Bart Re: Do you have to do dialysis or can you go straigt to tx? Jill, I have not yet started dialysis and have been on the transplant list for two months, as of tomorrow. If I had a potential donor that was a match and finished all the testing with flying colors the surgery could be scheduled within the next 3-6 weeks. So, No, you don't have to be on dialysis to get a transplant. Kathleen > Does everyone have to spend some time on dialysis or can you go > straight to transplant? , you said you were at 20% when Barb gave > you her kidney, were you every on dialysis? > > Jill G. To edit your settings for the group, go to our Yahoo Group home page: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/iga-nephropathy/ To unsubcribe via email, iga-nephropathy-unsubscribe Visit our companion website at www.igan.ca. The site is entirely supported by donations. If you would like to help, go to: http://www.igan.ca/id62.htm Thank you Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 14, 2005 Report Share Posted August 14, 2005 Bart: One quick correction - FK506 is tacrolimus (Prograf). I was in a test for that. Bart Hawkins bkhphd@...> wrote: Jill, to add to Kathleen's point, my neph is emphatic re two things: Living donors are to be highly preferred, being that even a poor match generally will behave and last longer than a perfect cadaveric one; and that transplantation before dialysis begins is also highly preferred....the heterograft tends to last longer whether cadaveric or living. The problem of course is that kidneys are in short supply (relative to livers and hearts, where the average wait times are a couple months), the average wait here in Texas being some 5 years for a cadaver donation. As far as I can detect, many physicians are advocating earlier dialysis starts than formerly.....of course dialysis is " easier, " to perform than ever before....at inception, this was done only in hospital, only under anesthesia, and by means of glass catheters inserted into great veins (of course this is early 60's medicine if I remember rightly). The same appears to be true of transplants....with the advent of FK506 (cyclosporine) survival rates have improved dramatically for all solid organ transplant classes. Bart Re: Do you have to do dialysis or can you go straigt to tx? Jill, I have not yet started dialysis and have been on the transplant list for two months, as of tomorrow. If I had a potential donor that was a match and finished all the testing with flying colors the surgery could be scheduled within the next 3-6 weeks. So, No, you don't have to be on dialysis to get a transplant. Kathleen > Does everyone have to spend some time on dialysis or can you go > straight to transplant? , you said you were at 20% when Barb gave > you her kidney, were you every on dialysis? > > Jill G. To edit your settings for the group, go to our Yahoo Group home page: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/iga-nephropathy/ To unsubcribe via email, iga-nephropathy-unsubscribe Visit our companion website at www.igan.ca. The site is entirely supported by donations. If you would like to help, go to: http://www.igan.ca/id62.htm Thank you Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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