Tag: fresenius (Page 51 of 52)

Going Back to go Forward: Revisiting Yesterday’s Blog plus Cycler Drain Problems

But first going Forward: a bad night for me and Peritoneal Dialysis. The system would just not drain, regardless of where and how I stood, what dance steps I made or how I held my mouth. The Cycler persisted on sounding its loud “Draining slowly” warning, of course with no reflection on what was causing the slowness. I checked and rechecked both the Drain Line (yellow) and the Blue is You Line to no avail. I removed all tape and fixtures on the Catherer Line, and gently tugged the Catherer Line itself to no avail.

On average over six months, the total time I spend on the Cycler itself is on the order of 10 hrs 30 minutes; last night it approached 11 hrs, an all-time high. For the record, 3/4 nights the Cycler alarms on the Drain Cycle; only 25% of the time do I experience a restful night’s sleep without Drain Alarms.

Expecting that something was just not as it should be, I contacted my PD Nurse at Fresenius. She gracefully agreed to see me as soon as I could get there, some 1/2 hour drive away. Upon arrival at the Fresenius Clinic, she manually drained my PD Access, then added 500 mL of fluid and timed how fast it went in (fill) and how fast it Drained. She then did so with 2000mL. In both cases, specs were exceeded. (She used 100 mL per minute for the drain as the norm, so 20 minutes was the time expected.)

So available tests suggested my PD catheter system is performing to specifications. I am to suit up again tonight with hopefully better results. If not, the next step would be to x-ray my stomach area to ascertain if all is as should be with the catheter interior to my stomach.

BTW, while there I asked about replacing the line on my catheter that leads from the section that actually enters the stomach to the Blue is You connect on the Cycler and was told that this is accomplished every six months as a matter of course. Stand by for updates.

Now an update on how data moves around Fresenius or doesn’t. Clinic personnel do not have a live feed of data coming off the Cycler even though the Cycler has a cellphone-based modem to transmit data. They received stored biometric data when I visit the clinic and bring in the installed USB thumb drive. They can see and respond to any comments I make via the App, but it is unknown how much if any of the other data they can review.

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Fresenius is touting a new integration of data sources and support via their Kinexus Therapy Management Platform as being specific to both the Liberty Cycler (the current PD device I’m using) and the new-to-the-world VersiPD system in early beta testing I have previously blogged about. See this link for more information. You may view an embedded video from the above link that is embedded below. It seems to take a few seconds to load – maybe.

The Kinexus rollout suggests Fresenius recognizes they need to improve their data integration efforts and lever up on the data they are by default collecting on patients. I’ll post updates as my understanding in this area improves.

Fresenius Medical PatientHub App; “Feature” not documented

Those employing the Fresenius Liberty Cycler to support their daily home peritoneal dialysis, know that when coming off dialysis in the morning, one of the last Cycler screens requests input of a host of biometric data including weight, blood pressure, pulse, type of dextrose used, last bag type, glucose, etc. On the PatientHub app (I use an Android-based Samsung  S20+5G) you are required to input a bunch more data including if you entered your vital signs in the Liberty Cycler, solution information, any manual exchanges, etc. Lots of data.

My first observation is that given that I have been faithfully supplying requested data since starting dialysis on 9/30/2022, not one entity or person from my PD team or anywhere else has ever commented on the same. Not one.

We had a philosophy in the Navy that in the face of too many reporting requirements from desk jockeys, just stop sending them and see if anyone squawks. No squawks, no report, that simple. Perhaps that approach should be used here.

My second observation involved the PatientHub App’s “Features” not being implemented in a meaningful way. When you dig down from the login screen to the landing screen, there is a tab in the upper right corner named “Menu.” A menu choice is “Vital Graphs.” One would assume that some if not all of the data being input across the Fresenius Dialysis spectrum would be graphically presented herein. Such is not the case. For me, only my dry weight is listed which is not of much help in viewing data trends graphically.

I submitted a report to the Fresenius App keeper and received the response below a day later. It is the last graphic below.

From the response, it is clear that the most obvious integration of reporting systems is totally lacking, and apparently not a priority either. This further begs the issue of where all this data is going, who is viewing it, and to what end. I want to know and will be pursuing this “issue” further with Fresenius personnel. Standby. Out. (Screenshots of the App are below:)

Signon Screen
Menu Screen
My Vitals Graph
Query Response from Fresenius

Fresenius Medical Care: My Peritoneal Dialysis support company

I have put my very life in the hands of the company providing me PD support, Fresenius Medical Care, ticker symbol FMS. They provide Liberty Cycler equipment, medical support personnel, disposables, monthly supply replenishment, labs, and online support. Quite a mouthful. Given the level of my dependence on FMS, it behooves me to know all that is relevant about this company.

Wiki offers the following insights: Fresenius Medical Care AG & Co. KGaA is a German healthcare company that provides kidney dialysis services through a network of 4,171 outpatient dialysis centers, serving 345,425 patients. The company primarily treats end-stage renal disease (ESRD), which requires patients to undergo dialysis 3 times per week for the rest of their lives (When on hemodialysis – I am on Peritoneal dialysis every night.)

With a global headquarters in Bad Homburg vor der Höhe, Germany, and a North American headquarters in Waltham, Massachusetts, it has a 38% market share of the dialysis market in the United States. It also operates 42 production sites, the largest of which are in the U.S., Germany, and Japan.

The company is 32% owned by Fresenius and, as of 2020, generates around 50% of the group’s revenue.

The company is on the Best Employers List published by Forbes. (Note: Fresenius is #339 on Forbes’s Global 2000 in 2022.)

In December 2022 Helen Giza (54) was appointed Chief Executive Officer of FMS. Helen Giza joined Fresenius Medical Care in 2019 as Chief Financial Officer and took on the additional roles of Deputy CEO and Chief Transformation Officer in 2022 heading the FME25 transformation program. Previously, she was Chief Integration and Divestiture Management Officer at Takeda Pharmaceuticals since 2018. Before joining the Takeda Corporate Executive Team, she served as Chief Financial Officer of Takeda’s U.S. business unit since 2008. Prior to that, she held a number of key international finance and controlling positions, amongst others at TAP Pharmaceuticals and Abbott Laboratories. Helen Giza is a U.K. Chartered Certified Accountant and holds a Master of Business Administration from the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois, USA. From here:

Graphical analysis of FMS from a stock perspective from here is below:

FMS Revenue and Earnings
FMS 5-year Stock Performance
FMS by the Numbers
Should you buy FMS?

On 1/20/2023 I bought 500 shares of FMS at $18.26 per share. Today, 1/24/2023 I am down $.20 per share. They have plenty of room to run (I hope!)

Under the Hood: What It Takes to Run This Blog, feeser.me

Novices to the blogging world may be interested in what’s behind my blog on Peritoneal Dialysis, feeser.me. So for those with a slightly more technical bent, this blog documents build status as of the posting date.

To start the blog, I needed a Domain Name and a web hosting company to host the blogging software I intended to use (and am using) to make daily blog entries. I did a Google using WordPress (free open-source blogging software I used while at Purdue) and “hosting” and came up with numerous providers. I sifted through the offerings and decided on Dreamhost.com as optimum. For the grand sum of less than $100, they registered my selected domain name feeser.me. They provided web hosting and offered a simple one-click solution to installing WordPress’s latest version, 6.1.1. According to Wikipedia, WordPress is used by 42.8% of the top 10 million websites as of October 2021.

With the essential blogging computer-based support system set up, I had to figure out how to use it. I used three sources. First, I signed up for a $15.00 Udemy course on WordPress. I browsed through the course content and picked up what I needed to get up and running. Second, I went to Amazon and purchased a book on WordPress, which I have yet to use (frown face!) The book’s title is “WordPress for Beginners 2022” by Dr. Andy Williams. I have it as a reference should I need it. Third, I used and use Google extensively for specific guidance for WordPress’s many bells and whistles. Two of these are Themes and Plugins.

Hundreds of Themes are available, which provide the appearance of the blog/website being constructed by WordPress. I wanted a simple-looking interface and selected Twenty Twenty-One to meet my needs. This is what you see when you visit the site. Spartan in appearance, to the point, clean and uncluttered.

Plugins are a different story. Simply put a WordPress plugin is a piece of code that you can “plug in” to your WordPress website to improve – or add – a specific feature on your site. Keep in mind that the WordPress Plugin Directory has over 55,000 plugins available, which have received over one billion downloads. It is not a trivial task to decide how you can best tweak your WordPress-based blog to perform to your liking. To date, here are the Plugins I have installed and are running unseen in the background:

  • Visitor Statistics Pro ($29.00). This is my go-to Plugin to see what traffic is coming from where. Because of this, I am going to include in this blog all that this Plugin provides from their website:
    • Visitor Traffic Pro version is an innovative and easy-to-use plugin for WordPress to display your site traffic statistics in detail with excellent charts.
      • Full reporting
      • Online users, visits, visitors, and page statistics
      • Today visitors & visits chart & Today search engines
      • Recent Visitors (GeoIP location by Country, city, and region)    
      • Comprehensive overview page (Dashboard), including browser versions, country stats, hits, exclusions, referrers, searches, search words, and visitors
      • Visits, see how many hits your site gets each day and each week & month, Visits time graph to view the daily visitors per hour
      • Visitors, see who’s visiting your site
      • Recent visitors by IP & region
      • Visits, see how many hits your site gets each day
      • Visitors, see who’s visiting your site
      • Page tracking, see which pages are viewed most often
      • Search Engines, see search queries and redirects from popular search engines like Google, Bing, DuckDuckGo, Yahoo, Yandex, and Baidu
      • GeoIP location by Country
      • Interactive map of visitors’ location
      • Widget to display website statistics
      • Overview page for all kinds of data, including; browser versions, country stats, hits, exclusions, referrers, searches, search words, and visitors
      • Exclude IP’s Export primary data, Pagination, and date range search
      • Exclude user role from statistics (NEW)
      • Plugin Accessibility (NEW)
      • Free Mobile App included (NEW)
      • Support shortcodes. Click here to get the list of shortcodes (NEW)
      • Multisite (network) support (NEW)
      • Full GDPR
  • All-in-One SEO ($49.60/year for Basic). SEO, or Search Engine Optimization, takes up most of my post-post editing time. It involves tweaking the title, applying tags, meta concerns, etc., to optimize a given blog post’s probability of receiving a higher ranking by search engines. While I opted for the paid version, to date I am experiencing massive problems getting login credentials from the company.
  • Grammarly Premium ($151.78/year). Grammarly Premium is a paid extension/app that offers over 400 types of checks and features, checks for grammatical errors provides vocabulary enhancement suggestions, detects plagiarism, and provides citation suggestions. It helps keep my prose in order.
  • GoogleSiteSit Kit. While I have this Plugin installed, I am not using it to any extent, yet. See this link for additional info on the Kit.
  • Smush (running free version). Smush is a cloud-based service that optimizes images posted on WordPress to make them smaller in size and load faster. The free version I am running is limited to 25 MB in size. Most of the pictures I upload are larger than this so I haven’t received much value from this plugin.
  • TablePress (free). Supports the creation of an embedding in WordPress blog’s various types of tables. I haven’t used it yet, but when you view a table in the future you will know that this Plugin was used to create it.

As of 1/21/2023, the blog has been up for a couple of weeks now, with 14 or so posts. We have had visitors from 8 different countries viewing blog posts as follows:

  • United StatesUnited States (70)
  • EgyptEgypt (2)
  • GhanaGhana (1)
  • El SalvadorEl Salvador (1)
  • ItalyItaly (1)
  • AlgeriaAlgeria (1)
  • IrelandIreland (1)
  • CanadaCanada (1)

The order of referring sites is below:

1

https://www.google.com/ 9

2

https://www.pinterest.com/ 8

3

http://m.facebook.com/ 2

4

https://www.facebook.com/ 2

5

android-app://com.google.android.googlequicksearchbox/ 2

6

http://blogpros.com/ 1

7

https://www.linkedin.com/ 1

8

https://lm.facebook.com/ 1

9

https://blogpros.com/

Social Fitness and Dialysis: What is the most important factor?

A recent full-page ad in the WSJ paid for by La Foundation Publicis states that “50% of all people with cancer are afraid to tell their employers.” (WSJ 1/18/2023 p. A18) The ad goes on to state “We aim to abolish the stigma and insecurity that exist for people with cancer in the workplace.” I strongly suspect that the word “dialysis” could be substituted for “cancer” with the same implication. If people are afraid of what their employers, and by extension, the population view them as, what does that say about how they view themselves, their feelings, their mental state, and their relationships with others? Feelings are a two-way street. What single factor has been found to keep people physically stronger, minds sharper, experience less depression, less diabetes (keep in mind the strong positive correlation between diabetes and dialysis), recover from illness sooner, and generally live a fulfilled life? Sounds like a lead-in to a TV commercial for a magic pill or a snake oil sales pitch. It’s not.

For more than 85 years a group of Harvard studies has investigated what really keeps people healthy and happy, regardless of their circumstances. Particulars of this research have been published in the book shown above. It is linked to Amazon for reference and linked here also.

ONE factor in their study consistently stands out with a high explanation of ties to physical and mental health and by association longevity, and that is (drum roll please) the “enduring importance of good relationships.” The Harvard researchers found that close personal connections are the single overriding principle for living. good relationships keep us healthier, and happier. Period. End of discussion. So if you desire to be healthiest and happiest while on dialysis, cultivate warm relationships of all kinds. Reach out to your family and friends. Engage with your Dialysis Team. That’s what they are there for. Read this blog and make comments. I will respond to them. Engage your nephrologist. Prepare for our monthly televisits. Read your lab reports. Do research as much as possible to understand what they are telling you and your dialysis team. You are on the one hand your best advocate and on the other your best critic. The bottom line, get it out there and shake a hand. See the video below for a discussion by one of the primary researchers, Robert Waldinger:

In the military, we have a concept of “Having a shipmate’s six.” When someone tells you that they’ve “got your six,” it means they’re watching your back. By extension, that person expects you to have their back as well. “Got your six” is now a ubiquitous term in the military that also highlights the way military members look out for each other. The term derives from aircraft of old that could not see what was behind them. In a relative clock around the aircraft where 12 o’clock is straight ahead, and six is straight behind, having a fellow pilot’s six inferred watching out for enemy aircraft sneaking up behind them and shooting them down.

Example of getting it out there: My wife and I have a Golden Retriever named Dickens. (See picture below at 7 weeks.) Currently, he is a 7-month-old 60-pound bundle of energy that requires exercise at least twice a day. Our routine is I take him to our local Dog Park in the morning and also take him on a long walk. Obviously, this is both good for him and for me. My wife takes him for a long walk in the evening. While on our morning walk I meet lots of people who must pet a Golden and by association meet with me and share the love. I just met an ex-Navy pilot on our walk who lives close to us with a pool. He has an American Golden named Jackson who gets along perfectly with Dickens. He has invited us to exercise our Golden in his pool and interface with his family socially.

Dickens at 7 weeks

As Lavern Baker sang in the 1953 song embedded below, get out there and ‘shake a hand!’ I assure you your dialysis outlook will greatly improve. Who knows, you might get to love a Golden Retriever if you are lucky also! See you at the dog park.

Dialysis Hints

Over the course of being on dialysis for several months, I have initiated several tweaks to the process to save time, energy, and increase safety of the system. Today’s blog discusses four of these “system improvements.”

The cap on the end of the “Blue is you” fitting that attaches the Cycler to your catheter line can be rather hard to unscrew from its as delivered position in the cassette package. I would surmise that those with arthritic hands would find it particularly difficult to loosen. I have found that it helps to “break loose” the fitting while it is firmly in place in the stay-safe receptacle. Don’t unscrew it -> just loosen so it’s finger tight, then proceed with your hooking up to the Cycler per stated norms. The square fitting on the end of the connection is 10 mm, so having a 10 mm open end wrench by the Cycler supports this operation. I have one as shown below which I use nightly.

10 mm open end wrench

By necessity, the plastic line from the Cycler to my bed travels across the floor in front of the access door to our Master Bedroom. Especially in the dark, this is a potential tripping Hazzard for my wife’s entry and exit from the bedroom. The next two hints address this safety issue.

First of all, the line: From Amazon I purchased a product that is normally used to cover electric cords as a cover for the plastic line. Nightly, as part of the Cycler setup, I run the Cycler attachment line through the bottom slit in the cover, turn it over, and presto, the tripping hazard is alleviated. See picture below.

Line Cover

The second hazard is being able to see the cover etc. in the dark when my wife leaves or enters the bedroom. Again, from Amazon I purchased two LED motion sensor-capable lights that are placed by the door and armoire (pointing toward the bed) that turn on automatically for about 10 seconds with motion, then off. In the dark they provide an abundance of light to light up the pathway to the bedroom.

LED Pathway Light

The last item in this blog involves securing the drain line. I run the Cycler drain line to the shower in our Master Bath. It is common to tape down the drain line but cumbersome to do so. You have to get down on hands and knees to do this I’ve come up with a better way (for me) to secure the end of the drain line. My wife sacrificed a plastic bowl from the kitchen which I modified by drilling a 1/4 ” hole in the side about 1″ down from the edge. I then used scissors to cut out a “V”-shape to the drilled hole. I slip the “Yellow” plastic drain line bitter end into the V and thence to the hole to secure it. Then using the line, I just swing it into position covering the drain under the bowl face downward and I’m done. In the morning as part of cleanup I pull the bowl out of the shower, remove and cap off the line, rinse out the bowl and place it in the shower on the enclosed bench, and I’m done. Pictures follow.

Modified Plastic Bowl

Notch in bowl

And the next blog will be about?

Predicting Kidney Failure

From my history you may correctly ascertain that I spent many years on the edge of a cliff concerning when the kidney failure shoe would drop. I knew firsthand from my lab reports that my eGFR numbers were going the wrong way in conjunction with creatinine values steadily increasing. But to what extent, what timeframe, when would I have to go on dialysis as a result of complete kidney failure? Being an engineer and a Purdue Krannert School of Managment PhD I wanted numbers, probabilities, etc. No doctor even came close to a WAG (Wild-ass Guess) let alone a statement like “The probability is 0.62 that you will not require dialysis for at least five years.) I was just told that there is no cure and it’s only going to get worse.

Edge of Cliff

This blog will fix this gap for readers willing to gather some common lab numbers and click boxes on a website or iPhone/Android app. You will be empowered to calculate what I just laid out above on your own, and to play “what-ifs” with creatinine and other lab variables. For example, how high does my creatinine have to increase to put me in a high-risk category for dialysis? Rather than the current state of worry because your creatinine readings are going south placing you in a static kidney failure category without any indication of timing of pending failure, you will know where the cliff’s edge is. And failure is pending; kidney failure WILL happen if you live long enough to ring the bell. Trust me, I arrived there after thirty years of being under the gun or being on cliff’s edge.

There is a web site named MedCalc that provides free access to hundreds of medical -related calculations. The one of interest herein is by a MD/PhD by the name of Navdeep Tangri and is named

Kidney Failure Risk Calculator

It predicts progression to kidney failure in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) and is located at this link. It requires inputting the following information: eGFR, sex, urine albumin-to-creatinine ratio, age in years, albumin, phosphorus, bicarbonate, and calcium. These values are common to labs reports for those with failing kidneys. The output provides an estimate of your five-year risk of experiencing kidney failure. The embedded screenshot below is my result.

Since I am already on dialysis after experiencing greatly diminished kidney functioning, we would expect the dire results thus obtained. Try the algorithm. You might be enlightened.

MedCalc Logo

Grim Reaper & Dialysis

It is normal human nature to raise the question, “Now that I am on dialysis, how does this alter my lifespan?” For me at 84, I have three choices: Dialysis, Heart Transplant, or death. That simple. I chose not to pursue a transplant for one main reason – at my age younger people have much more to gain and potentially give back to society than I have so I defer to them. While I have ruled out a transplant, that does not mean I still can’t give a little back to society, this blog being an example. So it boiled down to Dialysis for me.

But this still begs the question, how has and is dialysis impacting my lifespan, or how much longer statically I will live. In 2018, adjusted mortality was more than twice as high among Medicare beneficiaries ages 66 years or older with CKD (96.0 per 1,000) compared with those without CKD (41.0 per 1,000). According to data from the U.S. Renal Data System, the chart below follows:

  • 70- to 74-year-olds on dialysis live 3.6 years on average, compared with 12.2 years for their healthy peers;
  • 75- to 79-year-olds on dialysis live 3.1 years on average, compared to 9.2 years;
  • 80- to 85-year-olds on dialysis live 2.5 years on average, compared to 6.7 years; and
  • Patients on dialysis ages 85 and up live two years on average, compared to 3.5 years for their healthy peers.

A check on the above is provided by the SSA with a web site in which sex and date of birth are entered to ascertain how numbered your days are. Mine is shown below from their site:

In researching background for this blog, I discovered that there is no simple answer to the question of how dialysis impacts life span. There are so many what is called in statistics “intervening variables” as to defy meaningful computation. A few of these variables are sex, confounding health conditions (approaching unique for each individual), ethnicity, race, age, age upon onset of dialysis, mental approach to dialysis, etc.

However, I did discover research from a group in Canada shown below that provides some interesting data. I fall in the last row of the bottom chart. Obviously being a diabetic AND on Dialysis loaded heavily in their predictive modeling. The last bottom row suggests I have a 4.1% chance of living 10 years after starting dialysis. I’ll take the odds.

Survival Estimates

Bottom line: All of us have a need to be exceptional, don’t we?

Storage Hint

Today being Wednesday, it was time to restock our Ready Service Locker (RSL) with a week’s worth of Cycler supplies. Specifically, 5L dextrose bags, 3 L 1.5 % bags, 2.5 % 3 L bags, and cassettes for the following seven days. We moved the associated boxes and gear from our monthly storage unit in the spare bedroom to the Cycler area.

Making Ready for resupplying our RSL

When your start to open the boxes containing the dextrose fluid for the Cycler, you will notice a large warning not to use a box cutter to open the box.

Box Warning

The short video embedded below shows you how to open the boxes without any possibility of damage to the contents.

Safely Opening Boxes

After opening the boxes, they are unloaded into the four bottom right divisions as shown in the last picture below, with the heavier 5 L bags in the bottom two divisions, and the lighter 1.5 and 2.5 gabs in the upper two divisions. We have moved the cassettes to the shelf under the Cycler so that they don’t have to be bent 180 degrees for storage.

Power Backup Dialysis Cycler

I have seen various takes on the requirements to provision backup power for the Dialysis Cycler (and most of it out in left field.) The purpose of this blog post is to provide my input to this concept (BS/MSEE Purdue University.) The image below from the Cycler Manual shows the max power at USA’s nominal 115vac public power to be 480 watts. Keep in mind that this is MAXIMUM.

What does it take to feed a 480-watt load for say 11 hours (my Cycler times have been in general between 10 hours 25 minutes and 10 hours 50 minutes?) In this case, I am going to address battery backup in the form of a UPS (Uninterruptable Power Supply.) We need to feed a 480 watt load with nominally 115 vac for 11 hours. These are our parameters for calculating the number of and Amp-Hour requirements for batteries for our UPS, as well as the Invertor to invert 12 volt direct current from the battery(ies) to 115 vac.

Luckily for us, there are several USP Calculators available on the web. I have linked the one we will be using. We have to use iteration (try values until desired results are obtained) in the panel.

In the UPS panel, I inputted our power of 480 watts, available battery amp-hours of 200, and number of 200 amp-hour batteries at 3 to obtain the 11 hours 32 minutes runtime which would cover our requirements. From this we have calculated that we require three, 12-volt 200 amp-hour batteries. Turning to our universal off the shelf place, Amazon, we find that Renogy makes such a battery for $359.99 each, or about $1180.00 for the three.

The inverter of at least 600-watt capacity is also sourced from Amazon. A 600-Watt Pure Sine Wave Inverter goes for $78.70.

We need one more component to kluge together a UPS for our Cycler, a trickle charger to keep the batteries up. Amazon has one of these fitting the bill (10-Amp Car Battery Charger, 12V and 24V Smart Fully Automatic Battery Charger Maintainer Trickle Charger w/ Temperature Compensation for Car Truck Motorcycle Lawn Mower Boat Marine Lead Acid Batteries) for less than $27.00.

So, for $1180 + $79 + 27 = $1286 plus tax etc. you can build a healthy UPS that will run your Cycler for a complete Dialysis. You will also have to provide some battery interconnecting cables. Or you can buy a small gas generator such as a Honda 1000, or a new Ford truck with EV and plug into it, or……? You are in “charge.”

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