LOW SODIUM!
LOW POTASSIUM!
LOW PHOSPHORUS!
GLUTEN FREE!
ETC ETC ETC ETC ETC!!!!
Lord I pray for your guidance on my meals!
AMEN
In 2012 I started dialysis! University of Alabama (Birmingham) Medical Living Kidney Donor Center Screening Form https://www.uabmedicine.org/patient-care/treatments/kidney-transplant/donor-form Vanderbilt University (Nashville, TN) Medical Center Living Donor Intake Form https://redcap.vanderbilt.edu/surveys/index.php?s=XT7N7AHTYP
LOW SODIUM!
LOW POTASSIUM!
LOW PHOSPHORUS!
GLUTEN FREE!
ETC ETC ETC ETC ETC!!!!
Lord I pray for your guidance on my meals!
AMEN
Very nauseous today!
Every move is a calculated 8-count.
I try everyday to see the goodness of getting up and going to work.
I know that when dialysis begins I will feel better.
But I know my God can heal me now if it is his will.
It appears I only journal when I am feeling bad.
That's when I have to talk to myself and the Lord more.
I must bring his promises to my memory so I know the real reason I keep putting one foot in front of the other.
I think back to a friend who died of kidney failure (Carolyn Flood) and how she must have felt coming to work everyday.
The distances she had to walk between buildings pales in comparison to what I have to do.
I am encouraged by her fight until the very end.
And so I keep on the battlefield for my Lord as a living testament to his grace and mercy.
He is a good God. I know brighter days are ahead.
I keep songs in my heart to remind me - God never fails!
He abides in me! He gives me victory! God never fails!
Thank you Jesus for the song writers who take your words and so eloquently put them to music as a message for our hearts.
We have a fundraiser a work for chair massages.
But I am not sure if my muscles are beyond sore. Sometimes I just hurt in my muscles.
But would love to get a massage. H AHAH AH HAHA HAHAH
Have to complete my Annotated bibliography so I may wrap us my literature review.
ALL FOR NOW! I am recharged to face what ever comes my way!
02-07-12 I really enjoy when I am feeling relatively OK!
02-10-12 I AM FEELING REALLY TIRED TODAY!
Know things will be better when I start dialysis.
But all things considered I am doing well.
I can still get up and walk. THANK U JESUS!
An intact PTH is the most frequently ordered parathyroid hormone test. It is ordered to help diagnose the reason for a low or high calcium level and to help distinguish between parathyroid-related and non-parathyroid-related causes. It may also be ordered to monitor the effectiveness of treatment when a patient has a parathyroid-related condition. A calcium test is almost always ordered along with a PTH test. It is not just the levels in the blood that are important, but the balance between them and the response of the parathyroid glands to changing levels of calcium. Usually doctors are concerned about either severe imbalances in calcium regulation that may require medical intervention or in persistent imbalances that indicate an underlying problem.
PTH levels can be used to monitor people who have conditions or diseases that cause chronic calcium imbalances or to monitor those who have had surgery or other treatment for parathyroid tumors.
A PTH test may be ordered when a test for calcium is abnormal. It may be ordered when someone has symptoms associated with hypercalcemia, such as:
PTH may also be ordered when a person has symptoms associated with hypocalcemia, such as:
A doctor may order a PTH, along with calcium, at intervals when someone has been treated for diseases or conditions that affect calcium regulation, such as the removal of a parathyroid tumor, or when a person has a chronic condition such as kidney disease.
Sometimes, an intraoperative PTH test will be ordered when someone who has hyperparathyroidism is undergoing surgery to have abnormal parathyroid tissue removed.
A doctor will evaluate both calcium and PTH results together to determine whether the levels are appropriate and are in balance as they should be. If both PTH and calcium levels are normal, then it is likely that the body's calcium regulation system is functioning properly.
Low levels of PTH may be due to conditions causing hypercalcemia or to an abnormality in PTH production causing hypoparathyroidism. Excess PTH secretion may be due to hyperparathyroidism, which is most frequently caused by a benign parathyroid tumor.
The table below summarizes results that may be seen:
Calcium - PTH Relationship
Secondary hyperparathyroidism is usually due to kidney failure. In people with kidney disease and/or failure, phosphorus may not be excreted efficiently, disrupting its balance with calcium. Kidney disease may also make those affected unable to produce the active form of vitamin D, and this in turn means that they are unable to absorb calcium properly from the diet. As phosphorus levels build up and calcium levels fall, PTH is secreted. Secondary hyperparathyroidism can also be caused by any other condition that causes low calcium, such as malabsorption of calcium due to intestinal disease and vitamin D deficiency. In secondary hyperparathyroidism, people will generally have high PTH levels and low or normal calcium levels.
Sometimes, people with chronic secondary hyperparathyroidism develop high serum calcium and still have high PTH; this is sometimes called tertiary hyperparathyroidism.
Because there are many fragments of PTH, tests for PTH may measure one or more of the fragments. None of the assays for intact PTH measure PTH (35-84), which is actually the fragment of PTH present in highest amounts in blood. Many intact PTH assays measure PTH (7-84) as well. In most people, this fragment is present in much lower amounts than PTH (1-84), so this is not a concern. In kidney failure, a common setting for measuring PTH levels, PTH (7-84) levels increase compared to PTH (1-84), and sometimes over half of what is measured as PTH represents this N-terminal truncated fragment. Some intact PTH assays do not measure this fragment and will give lower PTH results when increased PTH (7-84) is present.
PTH levels will vary during the day, peaking at about 2 a.m. Specimens are usually drawn about 8 a.m.
Drugs that may increase PTH levels include phosphates, anticonvulsants, steroids, isoniazid, lithium, and rifampin.