Friday the 13th

Hello everyone, I would like to apologize for all those that follow this blog regularly. I have not written on here in awhile. I was in the hospital for a short time and I just haven’t felt like writing, but now I am back. :)
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Wow what a day this was! I woke up from my slumber to find that I could not breathe, I was choking and gasping for air. I was suffocating and was fighting for dear life. I was spitting up blood which made matters worse. My heart felt like it was pumping one million beats a minute. I was almost certain that I was going to die. I was also hooked up to my dialysis machine which I had to disconnect from before the treatment was over. The way the peritoneal dialysis works is it sends a sugar solution into your body usually through a Catheter that is inserted in your stomach. “The walls of your abdominal cavity are lined with a membrane called the peritoneum, which allows waste products and extra fluid to pass from your blood into the dialysis solution. The solution contains a sugar called dextrose that will pull wastes and extra fluid into the abdominal cavity. These wastes and fluid then leave your body when the dialysis solution is drained. The used solution, containing wastes and extra fluid, is then thrown away. The process of draining and filling is called an exchange and takes about 30 to 40 minutes. The period the dialysis solution is in your abdomen is called the dwell time. A typical schedule calls for four exchanges a day, each with a dwell time of 4 to 6 hours. Different types of PD have different schedules of daily exchanges.”[Peritoneal Dialysis]

But when this sugar water stays in your body for awhile it brings up your sugar levels in your blood which may make it look like you have diabetes. When you have too much sugar in your body this will make you thirsty and you may drink more. If you are on dialysis this can be a bad thing because your body will begin to have too much fluid build up in your body. But if the dialysis solution doesn't stay in your body long enough it doesn't clean your blood like it should, so it's a hard balance to find.

Thank God, my parents were home, and they were there to help give me a ride to the hospital. My pride got the best of me I walked out to the car myself, I probably should of let my father help carry me, but nope not me. (I know, I'm a knuckle head!) When I got to the hospital, they hooked up some oxygen to my face and after a few hours I wasn't spitting up blood any longer. I was feeling much better, I could actually breathe. After a couple of X-rays, they found that there was so much fluid built up around my lungs which caused my lungs to feel so overwhelmed which lead me to spit up the blood.

The dialysis was actually part of the reason why I had this little episode. See the problem I have, is the sugar solution doesn’t always drain out and I start to collect this fluid all over my body, in places such as my legs, groin, and chest cavity. This is what happened to me here, the fluid was actually collecting around my lungs and it was choking my body from the inside out, thus making me spit up blood. Not only that all this fluid as put a lot of pressure on my heart which is bad because I already have heart failure. What was the answer? Well to get this fluid out of my body and quick!

So I was on dialysis for pretty much two days none stop. I have been trying to tell my doctors that quicker exchanges pulls more off than the longer ones. I have also told them that the longer dwells are bad because I absorb a lot of it. It’s funny how you can tell doctors things and they just don’t seem to listen. Another thing I thought was discouraging, was that they were didn’t have all the supplies needed to get proper treatment. What I mean is they didn’t have a scale to weigh the manual dialysis bags. They were using other means to weigh these bags such as a baby incubator. This was on the ICU floor, which is the Intensive Care Unit for those that don't know what that means.

When I was doing better I got to go on another floor, which had a Fresenius dialysis machine. I was supposed to be hooked up to this machine to help get rid of the fluid but a lot of the times I would be getting hooked up very late. This was because they didn’t have any drain bags, in which I would be on dialysis throughout the morning of the next day. The one night I was about to walk out because I was supposed to get care and wasn’t really getting any help concerning my dialysis. I mean I could of taken better care of myself doing the dialysis.

I thought the nurses were great and are very unappreciated for what they do, day in and day out. I have no complaints about them, but the supply team of HUP needs some work. I mean they should have the right amount of dialysis supplies and even if they didn’t they could borrow it from CHOP like they did, but they could of done it a little quicker especially if they knew they didn’t have enough. I was a little discouraged with HUP but than when I think about this, I am sure there are worse off places that have to deal with even less supplies to make ends meet.

I will be writing a letter to help document this, so that hopefully others will not have to go through this. It really should not be happening at one of America's top ten hospitals.

While in the hospital, I had a nurse who said it was refreshing to have a patient like me, always having a smile on my face and high in spirits. I have also done most of the work to take care of myself such as setting up the dialysis. I think that it is my job to be that refreshing patient who is always smiling no matter what may be wrong with me. To be that patient that is always happy, to make all those who see me to say "Wow! What is wrong with that guy? Why is he so happy?"

11 comments:

Anonymous said...

Tom, I hope you're doing better.
-Eric Franchetti

Anonymous said...

Amazing. No scales to weigh, no bags to help waste and doctors who don't listen to patients who have probably been utilizing the equipment on a greater basis then they have. I am sure the sweet nurses who do care and help are getting blamed at the closed door meetings they aren't allowed to attend because of their lack of education. You want to learn something about health care? Talk to the unfortunate who have to learn to work with the system. Anyways, Keep smiling T and give me a call when you feel up to it.

ThomasCSlater said...

Thanks Eric for stopping by and for your concern. I am doing better, taking it one day at a time.

ThomasCSlater said...

Yeah the system could defiantly have some changes. Greg you know me, I will keep on keeping on. :)

Anonymous said...

I pray you're doing better, Thomas. I have missed your posts!

ThomasCSlater said...

Thank you Jean, that means a lot to me.

Christina G. said...

Thomas, lately you have crossed my mind a number of times, & I wondered if you may've ended up in the hospital. I was just suggesting to a fellow blogger/friend that he visit your site, & so I came here today to copy & paste your URL for him. I am so glad you are back & doing better. You can't leave us! For many reasons! Who else would write such great articles about ladybugs??! I'm still impressed with that one!

I think it's of note that your previous post began with the Scripture that it did...

and remember, it's the size of the fight in the dog....

Much love, Christina

ThomasCSlater said...

Christina, thank for stopping by and for the words of encouragement. I will get back on here, to continue my story, just been a little bit of a slump, a rough couple of weeks.

Anonymous said...

I miss you, Thomas. Hope you're unslumped soon, and I pray the road before you levels out.

ThomasCSlater said...

Hey Jean Thank you for stopping by! I really do appreciate your prayers and I am really grateful, thank you.

Sue said...

Hey Thomas. I have neglected your blog and I'm sorry. You always have something worth reading so I'm back. Hope the health is still improving.

I have actually tagged you, I'd love it if you had the time to either reply here (and let me know) or in my comments section.

http://myroadasitravelit.blogspot.com/2009/04/what-are-your-passions.html