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Dialysis advocate needs kidney, heart transplant - Visalia Times-Delta - Visalia Times-Delta PDF Print
Jennifer McClung_7435

Jennifer McClung, 34, of Springville, has been an advocate for dialysis patients in Porterville and Visalia. She tells renal patients that dialysis isn't a death sentence. Now, she's in need of a both a kidney and a heart transplant to save her own life.(Photo: Teresa Douglass)

Jennifer McClung tells fellow renal patients that dialysis isn't a death sentence.

This 34-year-old woman from Springville started a support group at the American Renal Association's Porterville Dialysis Clinic, where she gets treatment three times a week, and attends a similar support group in Visalia.

Now, she's in need of support. Specifically, she needs both a kidney and a heart transplant to save her own life.

<![CDATA[ .oembed-asset-link { background: #fff; border-bottom: 1px solid #e1e1e1; } .oembed-link-anchor { display: block; clear: both; } .oembed-link-thumbnail{ float: left; padding: 14px; } .oembed-link-thumbnail img { max-width: 78px; max-height: 60px; display: block; } p.oembed-link-title { font-size: 75%; color: #009BFF; margin: 0 14px; padding-top: 12px; font-weight:normal; text-align: left; line-height: 120%; } p.oembed-link-desc { font-size: 100%; color: #666; font-weight: normal; margin: 0 14px 14px 14px; font-family: 'Futura Today Light'; text-align: left; line-height: 120%; } ]]>image VISALIA TIMES-DELTA AND TULARE ADVANCE-REGISTERBrave young man battles cancer, prepares to leave legacy

She has to raise $10,000 this summer to get in line for a double transplant at the University of California San Francisco. Money raised would pay for living expenses in the San Francisco Bay Area after she's released from the hospital for a period of six weeks.

Her mother, Linda McClung of Visalia, plans to accompany her daughter and monitor her recovery.

So far, they've raised $550.

They invite the public to contribute to Jennifer's GoFundMe account and to attend a yard sale Aug. 1 at her mother's house in Visalia.

Her story

Jennifer began receiving dialysis treatments when she was 16 years old because her kidneys were too small to support her growing body, she said. Until two years ago, she received peritoneal dialysis at home while she slept at night.

Dialysis removes waste products from the body which is normally accomplished through the kidneys.

Each night Jennifer hooked up to a dialysis machine in her bedroom for 11 hours. Basically, a tube connected her peritoneal cavity in her abdomen to the machine. A solution would fill the cavity and empty back into the machine while she slept.

It's a gentler process than hemodialysis which involves the direct filtering of blood.

Two years ago, she got sick. Tests showed she had a cyst on one of her ovaries and her heart was enlarged.

After her ovary was removed, she had to go on hemodialysis which is tougher on the body, especially the heart, she said. When she first entered the dialysis clinic in Porterville, she was struck by the down-trodden atmosphere.

Hemodialysis is a difficult process to endure.

<![CDATA[ .oembed-asset-link { background: #fff; border-bottom: 1px solid #e1e1e1; } .oembed-link-anchor { display: block; clear: both; } .oembed-link-thumbnail{ float: left; padding: 14px; } .oembed-link-thumbnail img { max-width: 78px; max-height: 60px; display: block; } p.oembed-link-title { font-size: 75%; color: #009BFF; margin: 0 14px; padding-top: 12px; font-weight:normal; text-align: left; line-height: 120%; } p.oembed-link-desc { font-size: 100%; color: #666; font-weight: normal; margin: 0 14px 14px 14px; font-family: 'Futura Today Light'; text-align: left; line-height: 120%; } ]]>image VISALIA TIMES-DELTA AND TULARE ADVANCE-REGISTERShort & Sweet: Good news, celebrations and retirements

"It's like your blood is going through a cheese grater to get cleaned and it throws it back into you," she said.

After treatment, she experiences a wiped out feeling that she calls a dialysis hangover. She has to eat to "sober up."

She said she wanted to show the other patients how to have a positive attitude. She started a support group and become a patient representative in Porterville. She convinced her dialysis clinic to offer bingo and serve root beer floats.

After she gets a new heart and a new kidney, she would like to become a speaker. Her message is clear.

"You can get through this and stay positive," she said.

Need help?

Does your nonprofit need specific help? We want to know about it. Email This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it or call Inspire reporter Teresa Douglass at 735-3289. Talk to us on our website, www.VisaliaTimesDelta.com/section/inspire, or on the Visalia Times-Delta and Tulare Advance-Register's Facebook page.

How to attend

What:Yard sale to benefit Jennifer McClung's heart and kidney transplant

When: 6 a.m. to noon Aug. 1

Where: 2122 E. Princeton Ave., Visalia

Info: Contact Jennifer McClung at 359-0276 or This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

Account: Donations are accepted at any Bank of the Sierra for "Jennifer's Transplant."

Website:GoFundMe.com/JenniferKidney

Read or Share this story: http://vtd-tar.co/1MjgUjP

...

 
Dialysis advocate needs kidney, heart transplant - Visalia Times-Delta PDF Print
Jennifer McClung_7435

Jennifer McClung, 34, of Springville, has been an advocate for dialysis patients in Porterville and Visalia. She tells renal patients that dialysis isn't a death sentence. Now, she's in need of a both a kidney and a heart transplant to save her own life.(Photo: Teresa Douglass)

Jennifer McClung tells fellow renal patients that dialysis isn't a death sentence.

This 34-year-old woman from Springville started a support group at the American Renal Association's Porterville Dialysis Clinic, where she gets treatment three times a week, and attends a similar support group in Visalia.

Now, she's in need of support. Specifically, she needs both a kidney and a heart transplant to save her own life.

<![CDATA[ .oembed-asset-link { background: #fff; border-bottom: 1px solid #e1e1e1; } .oembed-link-anchor { display: block; clear: both; } .oembed-link-thumbnail{ float: left; padding: 14px; } .oembed-link-thumbnail img { max-width: 78px; max-height: 60px; display: block; } p.oembed-link-title { font-size: 75%; color: #009BFF; margin: 0 14px; padding-top: 12px; font-weight:normal; text-align: left; line-height: 120%; } p.oembed-link-desc { font-size: 100%; color: #666; font-weight: normal; margin: 0 14px 14px 14px; font-family: 'Futura Today Light'; text-align: left; line-height: 120%; } ]]>image VISALIA TIMES-DELTA AND TULARE ADVANCE-REGISTERBrave young man loses battle to cancer, leaves legacy

She has to raise $10,000 this summer to get in line for a double transplant at the University of California San Francisco. Money raised would pay for living expenses in the San Francisco Bay Area after she's released from the hospital for a period of six weeks.

Her mother, Linda McClung of Visalia, plans to accompany her daughter and monitor her recovery.

So far, they've raised $550.

They invite the public to contribute to Jennifer's GoFundMe account and to attend a yard sale Aug. 1 at her mother's house in Visalia.

Her story

Jennifer began receiving dialysis treatments when she was 16 years old because her kidneys were too small to support her growing body, she said. Until two years ago, she received peritoneal dialysis at home while she slept at night.

Dialysis removes waste products from the body which is normally accomplished through the kidneys.

Each night Jennifer hooked up to a dialysis machine in her bedroom for 11 hours. Basically, a tube connected her peritoneal cavity in her abdomen to the machine. A solution would fill the cavity and empty back into the machine while she slept.

It's a gentler process than hemodialysis which involves the direct filtering of blood.

Two years ago, she got sick. Tests showed she had a cyst on one of her ovaries and her heart was enlarged.

After her ovary was removed, she had to go on hemodialysis which is tougher on the body, especially the heart, she said. When she first entered the dialysis clinic in Porterville, she was struck by the down-trodden atmosphere.

Hemodialysis is a difficult process to endure.

<![CDATA[ .oembed-asset-link { background: #fff; border-bottom: 1px solid #e1e1e1; } .oembed-link-anchor { display: block; clear: both; } .oembed-link-thumbnail{ float: left; padding: 14px; } .oembed-link-thumbnail img { max-width: 78px; max-height: 60px; display: block; } p.oembed-link-title { font-size: 75%; color: #009BFF; margin: 0 14px; padding-top: 12px; font-weight:normal; text-align: left; line-height: 120%; } p.oembed-link-desc { font-size: 100%; color: #666; font-weight: normal; margin: 0 14px 14px 14px; font-family: 'Futura Today Light'; text-align: left; line-height: 120%; } ]]>image VISALIA TIMES-DELTA AND TULARE ADVANCE-REGISTERShort & Sweet: Good news, celebrations and retirements

"It's like your blood is going through a cheese grater to get cleaned and it throws it back into you," she said.

After treatment, she experiences a wiped out feeling that she calls a dialysis hangover. She has to eat to "sober up."

She said she wanted to show the other patients how to have a positive attitude. She started a support group and become a patient representative in Porterville. She convinced her dialysis clinic to offer bingo and serve root beer floats.

After she gets a new heart and a new kidney, she would like to become a speaker. Her message is clear.

"You can get through this and stay positive," she said.

Need help?

Does your nonprofit need specific help? We want to know about it. Email This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it or call Inspire reporter Teresa Douglass at 735-3289. Talk to us on our website, www.VisaliaTimesDelta.com/section/inspire, or on the Visalia Times-Delta and Tulare Advance-Register's Facebook page.

How to attend

What:Yard sale to benefit Jennifer McClung's heart and kidney transplant

When: 6 a.m. to noon Aug. 1

Where: 2122 E. Princeton Ave., Visalia

Info: Contact Jennifer McClung at 359-0276 or This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

Account: Donations are accepted at any Bank of the Sierra for "Jennifer's Transplant."

Website:GoFundMe.com/JenniferKidney

Read or Share this story: http://vtd-tar.co/1MjgUjP

...

 
CALLS FOR MORE DIALYSIS CENTRES - The Jet Newspaper PDF Print

The Jet Newspaper

CALLS FOR MORE DIALYSIS CENTRES
The Jet Newspaper
Calls have been made to Government to increase the number of dialysis centres around the country and supplement the current five which are located in Lautoka, Suva and Labasa. During the National Development consultation at the Namaka Public School ...

...

 
Renal leiomyosarcoma with soft tissue metastasis: An unusual presentation ... - UroToday PDF Print
image

Primary renal sarcomas are exceptionally rare, constituting 1% of all malignant renal tumours.

Since the prognosis for a renal sarcoma is particularly poor, differentiation from sarcomatoid renal cell carcinoma (RCC) is necessary. Histopathology and immunohistochemistry are the only modes of diagnosing these sarcomas as they have no specific features clinically and radiologically. We report a case of renal leiomyosarcoma which was clinically diagnosed as RCC. Histopathology revealed a spindle cell sarcoma and immunohistochemistry (IHC) confirmed a renal leiomyosarcoma. She also had a liver nodule and mass in the right side of neck and left arm. Biopsy from these sites revealed a similar morphology and IHC confirmed leiomyosarcoma. We report a case illustrating the rarity of this disease and its aggressive nature owing to fatal metastatic potential.

Written by:
Narula V, Siraj F, Bansal A.   Are you the author?
National Institute of Pathology, Indian Council of Medical Research, Delhi, India.

Reference: Can Urol Assoc J. 2015 Mar-Apr;9(3-4):E139-41.
doi: 10.5489/cuaj.2396


PubMed Abstract
PMID: 25844101

UroToday.com Renal Cancer Section

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Renal cell carcinoma metastatic to the tongue: A case report and review of the ... - UroToday PDF Print
image

Renal cell carcinoma (RCC) metastatic to the head and neck region is quite rare.

This report describes a case of RCC metastatic to the oral tongue presenting initially with a renal mass that evaded diagnosis by biopsy examination of the primary lesion and was eventually established as a papillary type RCC by lingual biopsy examination. The tongue mass progressed rapidly despite chemotherapy with interferon-?2b, caused difficulties with oral food intake, and thus necessitated removal by partial glossectomy. Treatment alternatives for lingual RCC metastasis include surgical resection for major functional impairment, risk of airway compromise, or massive hemorrhage. Radiotherapy might be useful and should be considered for specific patients. Lingual metastasis from RCC usually predicts poor survival.

Written by:
Altunta? O, Petekkaya ?, Süslü N, Güllü ?.   Are you the author?
Department of Otorhinolaryngology, Hacettepe University School of Medicine, Ankara, Turkey; Department of Oncology, Gaziantep Dr Ersin Arslan State Hospital, Gaziantep, Turkey; Department of Medical Oncology, Hacettepe University School of Medicine, Anakara, Turkey. This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Reference: J Oral Maxillofac Surg. 2015 Jun;73(6):1227-30.
doi: 10.1016/j.joms.2014.12.031


PubMed Abstract
PMID: 25843819

UroToday.com Renal Cancer Section

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