GFR dropped 5 more points and I don't know why.

Posted by csage1010 (Sue) @csage1010, Sep 22, 2021

HI all, I got some blood work today and I was actually expecting the results to be good, or at least stable. My GFR dropped from 59 to 54 in 2 months. I have lost 20 pounds and my sugars are within normal limits. So sad.

Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Kidney & Bladder Support Group.

@csage1010 It sure can be disheartening when we expect one thing, and get another! There are a couple of different reasons you saw a big change in your numbers. One has to do with your hydration and general overall feeling at the time the blood draw was done. Another has to do with the actual machines running the blood sample. If it is a different machine than has been used in the past, or recently recalibrated, you might see a difference. We usually do not know if there is a different machine. In general, our medical team is going to look at the trend of the numbers.

Have you been able to talk to your dr yet, about the weight loss and new results?
Ginger

REPLY

@gingerw Hi Ginger, that you for replying. I just got a note through the patient portal from my doctor that my numbers had gone down. I didn't mention in my post that I am on an antibiotic for a UTI, Sulfamethoxazole/trimethoprim. Is it possible that could have effected my numbers?

REPLY
@csage1010

@gingerw Hi Ginger, that you for replying. I just got a note through the patient portal from my doctor that my numbers had gone down. I didn't mention in my post that I am on an antibiotic for a UTI, Sulfamethoxazole/trimethoprim. Is it possible that could have effected my numbers?

Jump to this post

That should say "thank you for replying"

REPLY
@csage1010

@gingerw Hi Ginger, that you for replying. I just got a note through the patient portal from my doctor that my numbers had gone down. I didn't mention in my post that I am on an antibiotic for a UTI, Sulfamethoxazole/trimethoprim. Is it possible that could have effected my numbers?

Jump to this post

@csage1010 Oh, definitely! Anytime we have a change in our health, it can unbalance our system. Taking an antibiotic can cause upset in our digestive system, and if you were advised to "drink lots of water" that can actually send our numbers down a little bit! I recently found that out. If I was in your shoes, I would relax, and look more towards the next labs, to see if the trend is still there. Remember, eating healthy, quality exercise, all help us keep our kidney health as best we can.
Ginger

REPLY

Thank you. I'll try to relax, sometimes it's difficult.

REPLY

how you can have accurate abdominal ct scans , ultra sounds and mri's done for kidneys without using dye. pictures are never clear. why hasn't someone invented safe dye since this essential way of evaluating kidney disease. just reading blood work not enough. don't understand what's going on with medical chemistry when ckd is fairly common. any thoughts welcome

REPLY

There are certainly significant risks with contrast dyes. However, presently, there are no alternatives. I suppose it boils down to a risk/reward situation. The risk of reduced kidney damage in the short term (hopefully ONLY short term) vs the need to know what is going on in your kidneys, heart etc.

REPLY

Dye risk isn't short term. If you have damaged kidneys, it can do them in that's why doctor's don't permit use of dye to already failing organs. I agree with with mike206, more money is made from continuous dialysis than from a permanent fix. At least it seems that way.
Just reading blood tests for years as the patient's kidneys deteriorate doesn't make any sense. It does make dollars, though. By now, a safe dye should exist for a disease that's so common. It you can make a gun that works from a printer, surely you can invent a dye that doesn't delete the kidneys. I think all kidney disease patients should press their doctors for this invention. If we don't put the pressure on,
who will. Surely, not the dialysis company millionaires.

REPLY
@petuniamom567

Dye risk isn't short term. If you have damaged kidneys, it can do them in that's why doctor's don't permit use of dye to already failing organs. I agree with with mike206, more money is made from continuous dialysis than from a permanent fix. At least it seems that way.
Just reading blood tests for years as the patient's kidneys deteriorate doesn't make any sense. It does make dollars, though. By now, a safe dye should exist for a disease that's so common. It you can make a gun that works from a printer, surely you can invent a dye that doesn't delete the kidneys. I think all kidney disease patients should press their doctors for this invention. If we don't put the pressure on,
who will. Surely, not the dialysis company millionaires.

Jump to this post

I did just read on the mayo clinic website about a newer gadolinium-based contrast agent (called gadolinium group 2) that seems to be safer for kidney patients. It came from an article about Nephrogenic systemic fibrosis.

REPLY
@csage1010

I did just read on the mayo clinic website about a newer gadolinium-based contrast agent (called gadolinium group 2) that seems to be safer for kidney patients. It came from an article about Nephrogenic systemic fibrosis.

Jump to this post

@csage1010 My oncologist had talked to me about this agent. But last time I needed a scan that is best done with a contrast, we decided in my best interest that we would go "no contrast". I was already below 30% eGFR and we didn't want to risk anything. The technicians were pretty awesome people, had everything set up, and understood my insistence to see the orders!
Ginger

REPLY
Please sign in or register to post a reply.