Nephrology focuses on diagnosing and treating kidney diseases. The kidneys filter waste, balance fluids, regulate blood pressure, and manage acute and chronic conditions.
Send us all your questions or requests, and our expert team will assist you.
Hemodialysis is a comprehensive treatment regimen, not just a series of appointments. It dictates a new way of living. The treatment involves the actual machine sessions, a strict medication schedule, and a specific diet. Because the machine only works for a few hours a week, the patient must manage their health for the other 160 hours. This partnership between the machine and the patient is what keeps the body stable.
Follow-up is continuous. Unlike other medical conditions where you might see a doctor once a year, dialysis patients see their medical team several times a week. Blood tests are done monthly to ensure the dialysis is working efficiently. The “prescription” for the machine is constantly tweaked—adjusting the time, the filter size, or the flow rate—to match the changing needs of the patient’s body.
A typical in-center session follows a strict routine. You arrive, weigh yourself to see how much fluid you have gained, and wash your access arm. You sit in a reclining chair. A technician or nurse inserts two needles into your fistula or graft.
One needle pulls blood out to the machine; the other returns clean blood to your body. The machine is programmed with your “goal”—how much fluid to remove. You sit for about 4 hours. You can read, sleep, watch TV, or talk. The machine monitors your blood pressure constantly. Alarms might beep if the pressure drops or a line gets kinked. Once the time is up, the needles are removed, pressure is held to stop bleeding, and you weigh yourself again to confirm you reached your “dry weight.”
Kidney failure creates problems that dialysis alone cannot fix. Patients take a cocktail of medications to manage these side effects.
Diet is a huge part of treatment. The “renal diet” is restrictive because the machine only cleans the blood intermittently. Between treatments, waste builds up.
Once a month, a comprehensive blood panel is drawn. The most important number looked at is Kt/V (pronounced “K over V”). This is a math formula that measures the “dose” of dialysis.
It answers the question: Was the blood cleaned enough? A target Kt/V is usually 1.2 or higher. If the number is low, it means the patient isn’t getting enough cleaning. The doctor might increase the treatment time, use a bigger filter, or determine if the fistula is working properly. Other labs examine for anemia (hemoglobin), bone health (PTH, calcium, phosphorus), and nutrition (albumin).
The fistula or graft is the patient’s lifeline. It requires daily care.
Patients are taught to observe for the “thrill”—a buzzing vibration felt over the fistula that indicates good blood flow. If the buzzing stops, the access might be clotted, which is an emergency. The arm should be kept clean to prevent infection. No blood pressure cuffs or tight jewelry should ever be placed on the access arm. Regular “fistulograms” (X-rays of the vein) might be done to check for narrowing (stenosis) so it can be fixed with a balloon angioplasty before it clots off.
For motivated patients, home hemodialysis is an option. After weeks of training, the patient and a partner learn to set up the machine and insert needles at home.
This allows for more frequent treatments (e.g., 5–6 days a week for 2.5 hours) or nocturnal treatments (8 hours while sleeping). More frequent cleaning is gentler on the heart and allows for a much more liberal diet and fluid intake. It gives patients control over their schedule, making it easier to keep a job or travel.
Send us all your questions or requests, and our expert team will assist you.
Taking it later doesn’t work well because the food is already digested. Just take the next one with your next meal. Missing them consistently leads to weak bones and itching.
Yes, but it requires planning. You might eat half a banana on a dialysis day right before treatment so the machine can remove the potassium quickly. Consult your dietitian.
Weight is the only way to determine how much fluid has accumulated. The machine needs an exact number to determine how much water to pull off safely.
It usually takes 10 to 15 minutes of holding pressure. If it takes longer, let your nurse know, as your blood thinner dose during dialysis might be too high.
Yes. Patients are thoroughly trained to handle alarms and emergencies. Statistics show home patients often have better outcomes due to more frequent cleaning.
Hemodialysis
Hemodialysis
Hemodialysis
Hemodialysis
Hemodialysis
Hemodialysis
Leave your phone number and our medical team will call you back to discuss your healthcare needs and answer all your questions.
Your Comparison List (you must select at least 2 packages)