Dialysis world news


DCI helps dialysis patient remain active - Shelbyville Times-Gazette

ESRD. End Stage Renal Disease. Huge volumes of information are available regarding kidney disease at all stages, but ESRD implies a kidney patient must face tough decisions regarding his or her treatment. Most materials are very direct in the approach to kidney disease, i.e. "dialyze or die." However, there are options for necessary dialysis, including a kidney transplant.

Hundreds on kidney patients live and are treated in the Middle Tennessee area. Near 60 of those are treated at Dialysis Clinic, Inc. in Shelbyville.

The DCI on-profit treatment centers number at least 230 clinics in 28 states.

The Jackson family still operates these clinics, which owe their success at treating kidney patients and aiding transplant donors.

Digitally efficient machines monitor blood pressure, can be set to pump blood at certain rates of exchange, i.e., so many milliliters of blood per minute and includes advanced filtering with dialyzer units for each individual.

The actual dialyzer is removed for cleaning at the end of each session and trashed, or in some instances sent for cleaning to be reused by the same individual. The filtering process removes waste and water from the blood of the patient, performing as natural kidneys would.

More than six years ago, my family physician sent me to a nephrologist as my blood tests reflected possible kidney issues. After several years of monitoring my condition, the doctor suggested, "You know? I expect you will need dialysis eventually."

I was flabbergasted... how could this be possible? I dismissed the fact that my brother spent ten years on dialysis before receiving a donor kidney. In denial and suppressed anger, I sought the opinion of another nephrologist. During approximately two years of visits to the new doctor, (Dr. Oladapo Omitowoju) the exact same diagnosis was repeated to me as before.

I laughed in continued disbelief. How and why had my kidneys failed? Answer: Hypertension; fluctuating blood pressure, long-term.

A one-time diagnosis of diabetes was put aside, blood sugar levels, normal, and the nephrologist tripled the dosage of my blood pressure medicine. My kidneys functioned at 14-16%. Later: 8% and in a few more months, 4%. Dr. O. announced, "It is time. You can begin hemodialysis Friday."

Driving home, unable to think clearly, I concentrated on what Dr. O. had said. My condition was likely genetic. I could live for many years on dialysis. We discussed all the options in treatment and he arranged with surgeon Dr. William Russell to create a fistula in my left forearm. That did not succeed, as my veins are too fragile.

So, Dr. Russell installed a graft in my left upper arm, a plastic tube over a vessel that allows for the insertion of two needles. Blood out, blood in, through tubes attached to the hemodialysis machine. Because I slept through that surgery I became more calm and accepted that my life was changing.

An afternoon on the dialysis machine for me can be at any one of 23 stations at DCI. Ten to 23 patients and myself are plugged into the dialysis machines for several hours during any of three shifts on a Monday, Wednesday and Friday.

One of five nurses, four certified technicians, the interns and assistants welcome us to the clinic directed by Faye Chavez, RN, Nurse Manager.

We weigh in, wash our hands and access sites and are directed to our heated chairs and digital machines for the day's session.

May is my fourth month on hemodialysis at DCI.

The large clinic on the second floor of the Russell Plaza Building is beautifully designed and decorated in comforting colors of blue, green and white. The floors, counter tops and all surfaces shine. Television sets hang above all 23 stations. Florescent lighting is recessed in the ceiling and large windows on three sides allow us to view the woods and fields in the surrounding area. The view is beautiful, especially on a sunny day.

Nutritionist, Emma Montgomery, RD, LDN, with social worker, Rene Brothers, LAPSW, and the Clinic Director, Faye Chavez are all at work when patients arrive. The Clinic opens at 5:30 a.m. and those last to leave depart late in the evening. The RN's, Logie Fuerte, Haydee Rivera, Ted Labayo, and Maria Belinda Enriquez are scheduled per shift with alternating late evening duty during the week.

The CCHT group (clinical technicians) all share the same alternating schedule. Those individuals include: Chauneuell Green, Jennifer Johnson, Lanisa Crosslin, and Diana Aldridge. Jason Gentry is the Bio-Med Technician, and Beverly Waddell is the Unit Office Clerk. Beverly is the first to greet patients at the office window when we arrive at DCI.

I am scheduled to dialyze from 2 to 6 p.m. Monday, Wednesday and Friday, but am often called to come in early when a station is available. The drive from home to the Clinic is 16 miles one way. The 90 miles per week can be deducted as medical-related expense on income tax filings.

Travel to and from the clinic is the only expense not covered by insurance. Medicare covers other charges and DCI is a non-profit medical service. Average cost of treatment per patient, per session is normally more than $1,000.

Hemodialysis is not easy or comfortable initially, but one becomes accustomed to the process, and we beginners are treated with compassion and understanding by all the staff. Conceding to the time necessary each week is challenging if one is usually busy with work, childcare, or other endeavors.

Driving back and forth in bad weather is equally challenging. But the real challenge for me was facing those two large needles inserted into my upper arm, through the graft there installed for precisely the purpose of filtering or cleaning my blood.

Once plugged into the tubes that circulate the blood through the dialyzer, a patient's blood pressure is monitored every half hour. Heartbeat and body temperature are measured, speed of circulation is set for milliliters per minute, ankles and legs checked for swelling. (Many patients are diabetic and have lost kidney function as a result.)

One marvelous invention is a numbing cream, which applied a couple hours before a session does keep the patient from feeling the pain of those large, needle sticks. I am a strong advocate of this pain-relieving cream applied to my upper arm.

Initially, one begins with small needles at a pump rate of 175 to 300 ml per minute, and that is gradually increased to a rate of 400 ml per minute with larger needles. Time on the machine is a standard four hours per session.

A graft is a surgically implanted tube in the arm that covers a large vein. The tube allows or accommodates the two-needle placement for blood in, blood out. There are other kinds of access. One is a port in the chest or another, a port in the belly for peritoneal access. Another solution to ESRD (end stage renal disease) is a kidney transplant. Thousands of individuals await transplants. Currently, I do not qualify because I have not yet been on dialysis for two to five years, nor were any of those who offered me a kidney qualified to be donors.

So I and thousands of others will continue dialysis for the remainder of our lives. Some disqualifying instances for potential donors include being a childbearing age female, being obese or very elderly, or having once been a cancer patient. Without dialysis, I would die and soon. That explains most of the emotional, mental, psychological adjustment every patient faces. One irony is the fact that many kidney conditions are genetic and entire families can be subject to these choices for treatment for life.

One can lose two to five pounds in one session on the machine.

Therefore, the necessity for weighing in and out at every session, and for the patient's limiting liquid and sodium intake between sessions is extremely important. Blood chemistry is monitored monthly and discussed with the patient by the nutritionist. Patients learn all about foods high or low in sodium, potassium, phosphorous, and readings include blood number measurements of albumin, creatine, hematocrit, vitamin D and more. Believe me: at DCI, in the atmosphere of face masks, white coats and blue latex gloves, with bleach and vinegar as cleaning fluids, nothing goes unnoticed, unrecorded, unmeasured or unmentioned!

There are several DCI Clnics in the middle-Tennessee area, including Murfreesboro and Nashville. DCI social worker Rene Brothers, can arrange for patients to dialyze elsewhere, even as far as out-of-state or in another country. But that, I am not quite ready to do. However, Missouri and California are on my bucket list for trips outside Tennessee, even if I must taxi myself to a clinic three days during a week-long visit.

Thanks to Dr. Kolff and Dr. Johnson, I will not only survive, but can lead an active, productive and happy life. We thousands of kidney patients and our families owe deep gratitude to the many non-profits who so generously provide this costly, life-saving service. Thank you, DCI, Shelbyville!

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15000 renal failure cases reported in KSA - Yahoo! Maktoob News

 

There are nearly 15,000 renal failure patients in the Kingdom and two-third of them undergo dialysis, said Dr. Mohammed Al-Aumi, supervisor of King Salman Kidney Center in Riyadh.

Addressing a workshop organized by the Health Ministry for enhancing public awareness on kidney related diseases, he said renal failure cases are spreading all over the world.

“More than 600 million people around the world currently suffer from kidney diseases and they account for 14.2 percent of global population,” Al-Aumi told participants.

“It’s a silent disease that creeps into all parts of body and we’ll know its symptoms only after sometime,” he pointed out.

Al-Aumi underscored the ministry’s efforts to combat renal diseases. “It promotes public awareness to take precautions against the disease. These kinds of meetings help experts develop effective precautionary measures.”

He stressed the importance of conducting regular checkups in order to avoid complications. “Awareness programs will help relatives of patients to understand the best methods to deal with patients.”

Daleel Ghazi Al-Shammari spoke about the importance of educating patients and their families about the impact of kidney diseases and the need to correct their wrong notions.

“Every member of the society should know about it,” she said while highlighting the dangerous consequences of the disease.

The awareness program aims at informing the public about kidney functions and how its failure would affect a person’s health. Diabetes, obesity and blood pressure could lead to renal failure.

“The program also aims at encouraging the public to adopt a hygienic lifestyle, keeping away from smoking, reducing bodyweight, doing physical exercise and taking a balanced diet,” she said.

 

Copyright: Arab News © 2015 All rights reserved. Provided by SyndiGate Media Inc. (Syndigate.info).

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Jonathan commissions Defence Intelligence dialysis centre - The Guardian Nigeria (satire) (press release) (blog)
Jonathan-5-02-15President Goodluck Jonathan

• Nominates Justice Bello as FCT judge
• Senate passes desertification bill into law

REPRIEVE has come the way of an estimated 23 percent of Nigerian population that has kidney-related complaints as President Goodluck Jonathan yesterday commissioned the Defence Intelligence Agency (DIA) Dialysis Centre.

Performing the ceremony in Abuja, President Jonathan said the centre, which would provide homo-dialysis services to the military and security services in particular, brings respite to the frequent reports of kidney-related diseases in Nigeria.

While noting that military hospitals are supposed to be well furnished with the necessary equipment, Jonathan said military hospitals are supposed to treat even the President, his spouse and members of his immediate family, “It is expected therefore that the military hospitals should be well equipped.”

In his opening remarks, the Chief of Defence Intelligence (CDI) Rear Admiral Gabriel Okoi, said the well furnished facility has four machines and is manned by 10 staff at inception, but “as kidney dialysis require long term man power increase, and huge sums of money to operate, it is our hope that centre would improve on its staff strength and run for 24 hours in order to provide broader services.”

He pointed out that the initiative is informed by the rising number of people expected to go through the initial kidney treatment, even as the “the World Health Organisation statistics predicted that by the year 2020 the burden of diabetes and cardiovascular disease would have been increase by 130 percent in Africa alone.

He expressed confidence that the project would be regarded “as our corporate social responsibility to our immediate community. The services to be provided would be extended to the security community in particular and the Abuja community at large.”

In another development, President Jonathan yesterday forwarded the nomination of Justice Ishaq Usman Bello for screening and confirmation for appointment as the Chief Judge, High Court of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Abuja.

In a letter dated May 21 and addressed to the Senate President, David Mark, President Jonathan said his request was in line with Section 249 of the 1999 Constitution, which outlines the composition of a Federal High Court.

According to him, the Constitution provides “that the Federal High Court shall consist of a Chief Judge and such number of Judges as may be prescribed by Act of the National Assembly.”

However, due to the voluntary retirement of Justice Ibrahim M. Bukar from service on March 31 as the Chief Judge of the High Court, Federal Capital Territory, the National Judicial Commission has recommended the appointment of the most senior judge at the High Court of the FTC.

“In this connection, I attached herewith, a copy of the letter CJN/PFRN/A.1/11/527 of May 20, 2015 from the Chief Justice of Nigeria and Chairman, National Judicial Council.

“I have accepted the recommendation of the National Judicial Council and in accordance with Section 250(1) of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria as amended, which states that the appointment shall be subject to confirmation by the Senate.

“I hereby present the nomination of Honourable Justice Ishaq Usman Bello for confirmation by the Senate”, Mr. President said.

The Senate also passed the Bill for the establishment of the National Agency for the Great Green Wall into law.

This was upon presentation of report of the Joint Committee on Agriculture and Rural Development and Environment and Ecology on the bill.

In his lead debate, Chairman of the Committee, Senator Emmanuel Bwacha, states that the Executive Bill seeks to establish the National Agency for the Great Green Wall. According to him, the bill if finally assented to by Mr. President, would facilitate implementation of the provisions of the Convention on the Great Green Wall programme in Nigeria, which include management of draught as well as control of desertification and afforestation.

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Teleflex to Present at the 52nd European Renal Dialysis and Transplant ... - PharmiWeb.com (press release)

Teleflex Incorporated (NYSE: TFX) a leading global provider of medical devices for critical care urology and surgery will showcase its range of interventional products at the 52nd European Renal Dialysis and Transplant Congress in London on May 28 - 31 2015.

During the event Teleflex will highlight its Arrow® chronic hemodialysis catheter portfolio which offers both split-tip and step-tip catheters for both retrograde and antegrade insertion techniques.

The Arrow® NextStep® Retrograde and Antegrade product family consists of step-tip catheters that can easily be inserted and tunneled using retrograde or antegrade technique respectively. These step-tip catheters also have the advantage of split-tip high flow characteristics. The step-tip on these catheters is designed for smooth over-the-wire transitions during insertions and exchanges. The Arrow® Cannon® II Plus and Arrow Edge® products are split-tip catheters that can be tunneled using retrograde or antegrade technique respectively.

Teleflex will also anticipate the upcoming availability of the new ARROW-Clark™ VectorFlow™ hemodialysis catheter. The ARROW-Clark™ VectorFlow™ catheter (available in both retrograde and antegrade insertion platforms) is a symmetrical tip tunneled hemodialysis catheter that is designed to reduce loss of lock solution give sustained high flows minimise recirculation and reduce the risk of thrombus accumulation due to platelet activation resulting from shear stress.

About Teleflex Incorporated

Teleflex is a leading global provider of specialty medical devices for a range of procedures in critical care urology and surgery. Our mission is to provide solutions that enable healthcare providers to improve outcomes and enhance patient and provider safety. Headquartered in Wayne PA Teleflex employs approximately 12200 people and serves healthcare providers worldwide. Additional information about Teleflex can be obtained from the company's website at teleflex.com.

Forward-Looking Statements

Any statements contained in this press release that do not describe historical facts may constitute forward-looking statements. Any forward-looking statements contained herein are based on our management's current beliefs and expectations but are subject to a number of risks uncertainties and changes in circumstances which may cause actual results or company actions to differ materially from what is expressed or implied by these statements. These risks and uncertainties are identified and described in more detail in our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission including our Annual Report on Form 10-K.

Teleflex Arrow ARROW-Clark Arrow Edge Cannon NextStep and VectorFlow are trademarks or registered (in the U.S. and/or other countries) trademarks of Teleflex Incorporated or its affiliates. © 2015 Teleflex Incorporated. All rights reserved.

Business Wire
http://www.businesswire.com/

Last updated on: 27/05/2015

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Dialysis Patients Speak Out Against Proposed Cuts - WICS-TV

WICS-TV

Dialysis Patients Speak Out Against Proposed Cuts
WICS-TV
Dialysis Patients Speak Out Against Proposed Cuts. While lawmakers argued over budget cuts in the House and Senate today, dialysis patients spoke out against Medicaid cuts. The dialysis patient citizens group say 18,000 patients could be impacted ...

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