Yes, but don't count on it. Maybe surprised, but can be.
My brother recently died, he was too weak to continue on dialysis and died 1 1/2 days of stopping dialysis, I was told by the hospice Doctor that depending on your kidney damage it could be 2 day to two weeks, I want to add I really miss by dear brother
You need 2 years of college to get dialysis technician jobs.
We're Alive - 2009 Desperate Times 2-15 was released on: USA: 18 October 2010
yes,but he almost got killed 2 times.
1- high risk for infection related to using the equipments of dialysis. 2-
No, 2-Pac is not alive. He was shot multiple times and died on September 13, 1996.
Fixing Paco - 2012 Dreamy Dialysis Technician 1-2 was released on: USA: 23 October 2012
You can survive without both of your kidneys, but life wouldn't be very enjoyable. You would need to undergo dialysis of the blood every other day to filter unwanted pollutants from the blood. You can, however, happily survive a free independent life with only one kidney.
It appears that a combination of eating less and dialysis has reduced the need for insulin for our father. His glucose level was checked a few times after a meal of 2 cups of sticky rice or other high carbohydrate food. This gives us a baseline to whether the insulin is necessary after a particular meal. So, checking the glucose level, methodically, will help one find their sliding scale. Do check with your doctor and care provider nurses. So far, I have met one person on dialysis who has become free of insulin shots for a combination of dialysis and the diabetic medication. I have also met another patient on dialysis who came down with pancreas failure.
I would think you would learn not to get it from the first time. But hopefully you'd still be alive then.
2 October 1452 - 22 August 1485
you times 1 and 2 and then you times and divide the two numbers from the bus stop method and then you round it too the nearest hundred and divide by 10 and you have your awnser:)