Transplant Experience: Liver and Kidney Transplantation
Transplant Experience: Liver and Kidney Transplant Transplant Experience, Join Today Pre Kidney and Liver Transplant and Beyond Organ transplant medication and anti rejection drugs Healthy Living being an organ transplant recipient Shared Kidney and Liver transplant experiences Support with your organ transplant experience News and Events for organ transplant recipients Caregivers in the organ transplantation process Transplant Experience: Kidney and Liver Transplant for Children Transplant Experience: Liver and Kidney Transplant
Transplant Experience
Transplant Experience: Kidney and Liver Transplantation
Transplant Experience: Kidney and Liver Transplantation
Meet Lisa
alt="Meet Lisa - Kidney transplant recipient"
6 months after my transplant. It seemed as though I had hair growing out of every follicle in my body, and my weight gain was enormous.

Transplant Experience: Liver and Kidney Transplantation
alt="Meet Lisa - Kidney transplant recipient"
After 4 months on the different medication, I looked like my old self again.
“It's my kidney now.”

How I took control of my transplant...

When you get a transplant, tons of people are telling you what to do, what to eat, how to exercise, and what medicines to take. While they are the experts on transplantation, remember that you are the expert on yourself. No one knows how you feel and how you feel about the process you're going through like you. I learned to speak up and not hold anything back.

“Sometimes I think the transplant was the easy part; it was the medications that were so difficult to deal with.”

When you go through a transplant, you feel really guilty if you complain about anything. I mean, you've been given the greatest gift imaginable, and you tell yourself that the side effects from all the medications like the weight gain, mood swings, and facial hair aren't such a great price to pay for your life. But eventually I realized that it was OK to want to look and feel my best.

Don't get me wrong: I was thrilled that I felt so good. I could work out again, run around and play with my son, and just feel normal. But the side effects began to get to me. I didn't like the way I looked. It didn't look like me. It seemed as though I had hair growing out of every follicle in my body, and waxing constantly was a drag, not to mention expensive. In the beginning, my weight gain was enormous. It didn't seem to matter what I ate—I gained weight at the sight of food. Here I was, this young woman, a wife with a toddler, and I didn't feel feminine. I also felt as though my doctor wasn't really hearing me. Finally, my frustrations came to a boil, and I switched doctors.

My new doctor listened to my complaints, and within a few days, he changed my prescription to a small, easy-to-swallow pill. After only a few months on the new medicine, the body hair was gone, the weight came off, and I felt great.

I went from hiding my body to wearing bikinis, sleeveless shirts, and shorts again. I guess you could say now I feel free. My friends and family say that I look pretty much like I did before I got sick. To me, that's the greatest compliment you can imagine.

“It was OK to want to look pretty and feminine again.”

And then there's the bonus of just feeling good and confident that life can go on. Before the transplant, my life was on pause. Now I can hit the “play” button and move forward.

When I first got my transplant, I was under the impression that all rejection medications were the same, or at least they all had the same side effects. I did myself a favor and did some research. Once I found out that there were alternatives out there, I made the move to switch doctors—which was really hard, but the wisest decision in my case. I figured it was my body, my kidney now. I better do whatever I need to take care of it. I'm glad I did.

Prograf® (tacrolimus capsules and injection) is approved for the prevention of rejection in patients who have received a liver or kidney transplant. Only physicians and facilities specializing in transplantation should manage patients taking Prograf. Anti-rejection medications may result in an increased possibility of developing an infection or lymphoma, a type of cancer.

In clinical studies, up to 20% of patients taking Prograf developed insulin dependent diabetes after transplant, but in some patients, after two years, insulin was no longer required. Black and Hispanic kidney transplant patients were at an increased risk.

Prograf has been associated with toxicity to the kidneys and nervous system. Common side effects are tremor, headache, high blood pressure, diarrhea, nausea and changes in kidney function.

Prograf should not be used in patients allergic to tacrolimus. Prograf injection should not be used in patients allergic to castor oil.

Only your healthcare professional can weigh the risks and benefits of a prescription medicine and decide if this medication is the right one for you.

Prograf Prescribing Information Prograf Prescribing Information
Prograf Patient Information Prograf Patient Information
Prograf Safety Information

Prograf Safety Information



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Last modified: September / 2006