Dialysis (Hemodialysis and Peritoneal)
Dialysis (Hemodialysis and Peritoneal)
Dialysis (Hemodialysis and Peritoneal)
Definitions
Dialysis is the process of removing waste products and excess fluids from the body
Dialysis is the process of separating elements in a solution by diffusion across a semipermeable membrane (diffusive solute transport) down a concentration gradient
This is the principal process for removing the endproducts of nitrogen metabolism (urea, creatinine, uric acid), and for repletion of the bicarbonate deficit of the metabolic acidosis associated with renal failure in humans
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5. Encephalopathy
6. Pulmonary oedema 7. Peripheral neuropathy 8. Uraemic symptoms
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B. Acute dialysis
3. Normal BP
4. No oedema
7. Albumin >35
Hemodialysis
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Blood is removed from the body and pumped by a machine outside the body into a dialyzer (artificial kidney) The dialyzer filters metabolic waste products from the blood and then returns the purified blood to the person
The total amount of fluid returned can be adjusted A person typically undergoes hemodialysis at a dialysis center Dialysate is the solution used by the dialyzer
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HD consists of perfusion of heparinized blood and physiologic salt solution on opposite sides of a semipermeable membrane Waste products (urea, creatinine,ets) move from blood into the dialysate by passive diffusion along concentration gradient Diffusion rate depends on;
1. The difference between solute concentrations in the blood and dialysate 2. Solute characteristics 3. Dialysis filter composition 4. Blood and dialysate flow rate
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Blood from the patient is circulated through a synthetic extracorporeal membrane and returned to the patient. The opposite side of that membrane is washed with an electrolyte solution (dialysate) contain- the normal constituents of plasma water
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Dialysate;
1. Water
2. Glucose
3. Acetate
4. Bicarbonate
5. Calcium
6. Sodium
7. Potassium
Duration; 4 hrs
Complicated, need to be done in a center Heparin required Temporary arteriovenous access Permanent arteriovenous access
Access
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The access is where the needles are placed to remove blood from the body and return it to the body after it is filtered by the dialysis machine Three types of accesses exist: natural fistula, artificial grafts, and jugular vein catheters A vein and an artery are joined. Within 6 to 8 weeks, the vein becomes much bigger and is strong enough to be used as an access for dialysis
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1. During dialysis, two needles are placed into the fistula. One needle will remove the blood so it can be cleaned. The other needle will return filtered blood to the body 2. The needles are attached by plastic tubing to a special filter called a dialyzer (or artificial kidney)
3. A pump pushes the blood through the dialyzer. Blood passes on one side of the filter, and solution made by the machine passes on the other side. The blood does not mix with the solution. Instead, the solution pulls extra fluid and waste out of the blood by a process called dialysis 4. The "clean" blood returns through the plastic tube. It passes back into the patient's body through the second needle
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A graft is another type of access, which is used if a person's own veins are too small or weak to create a fistula. Usually, a graft is a soft, synthetic tube that connects to an artery at one end and a vein at the other. It is placed under the skin of the arm or thigh, like a natural vein. The patient's blood flows through it, like it flows through natural veins
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Sometimes hemodialysis is needed right away, and there is no time to create a fistula or graft. If this happens, a tube called a catheter may be inserted into a large vein in the neck (jugular vein), behind the collarbone (subclavian vein) or in the groin (femoral vein). The patient's blood can flow through this tube
Complications;
1. Vascular access
a. Thrombosis b. infection
3. Long term
a. Cardiovascular diseases b. Renal bone diseases c. Aluminum disease d. Social problems
2. Procedure related
a. Decrease BP b. Headache c. Cramps d. Fever
4. Chronic uraemia
a. Anaemia b. Infection c. Gonadal dysfunction d. Increase BP
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Standard HD
Characteristics:
1. Low permeability (low flux)
2. Membranes are made of natural products (cellulose) 3. Each session takes 4-5 hrs
Peritoneal Dialysis
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The dialysis membrane is the person's own peritoneum The dialysis fluid provides the 'container' in which waste products and excess water can be removed from the body Dialysis membrane acts as a filter
It keeps the dialysis fluid and the blood separate from each other, but it allows certain substances and water to pass through it
During dialysis, waste toxins and excess water pass from the blood into the dialysis fluid, and this is drained out of the body after a few hours A new bag of dialysis fluid is drained in, and the process is repeated
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The dialysis fluid is then left inside the peritoneum to allow dialysis to take place. The length of time it is left there varies (between 1 and 8 hours), depending on individual requirements and the type of PD
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The fourth before going to bed (leaving the fluid for the last exchange in through the night)
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The PD catheter acts as a permanent pathway into the peritoneal cavity from outside the body
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The catheter is usually 'left alone' for 5 days or more after the operation before it is used for dialysis
This allows it to 'settle in' and gives the abdominal wound time to heal PD could be done at home
Much less efficient than HD, this is why it is used more frequent
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Dialysate;
1. Water 2. Glucose 10. Sodium; 132mEq/l to reduce the 9. Magnesium; 1.5mEq/l
movement of sodium from the blood by gradient method
3. Dextrose; 1.5-4.25%
4. Acetate 5. Bicarbonate 6. Calcium; 3.5 or 2.5 mEq/l 7. Chloride; 102mEq/l
11. No potassium in PD
8. Lactate; 35mEq/l
Indications;
1. DM
2. No vascular access
3. CVS unstable
4. Children
5. Old adults
6. Pts unwilling to accept blood transfusion 7. Severe anaemia 8. Severe HD related symptoms e.g disequilibrium
Contraindications;
1. Peritonea adhesion
4. Massive polycystics
Complications;
a. Malnutrition
b. Peritonitis:
e. vancomicin or aminoglycosides. First dose in the first 2L exchange, scond dose at day 7
f. Gentamicin 1.5 mg/kg IP in the first 2L exchange followed by 4-8 mg/L IP in each exchange for 10 days
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Pharmacokinetics of dialysis
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D. Volume of distribution; drugs with large VD are not appreciably removed by HD, e.g digoxin, aminoglycosides E. Protein binding; only unbound drugs can pass through the dialyser membrane, e.g phenytoin, propranolol, oxacillin
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2. Dialysis conditions
A. Counter-current vs concurrent flow
3. Membrane characteristics
A. Thickness
B. Material type / pore size
C. Surface area
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Clearance of large MW drugs depends on pore size, surface area and flow rate
Therapeutic considerations
1. Supplementary dose should be administered post dialysis. If the drug is administered at the beginning of HD, the fraction would be removed, since it is not yet distributed in the body 2. Drugs with NTW, plasma level should be monitored to verify the predicted estimation 3. Drugs with wide therapeutic window, decision based on pts clinical status
4. Blood sample should be drawn at least 1 hr post dialysis to allow redistribution from the tissue, other references recommend 6-12 hrs post dialysis
5. Drugs which plasma concentration can be measured but some times no published data on the pharmacokinetic of certain drugs. if the pharmacokinetics are known then replacement dose could be calculated 6. Drugs with wide therapeutic range and serum concentration cannot be measured; single daily dose can be administered after dialysis
4. For pts on dialysis; the total clearance of the drog from the plasma (ClT) can be defined as the sum of the pts residential endogenous clearance and the dialysis clearance (ClD)
i.e ClT = Cl + ClD
If ClD >>>Cl then the drug will be eliminated much more rapidly during dialysis
Clearance can be related to half life by the following equation
t1/2
0.693 X VD ClT
t1/2
0.693 X VD Cl + ClD
VD is the volume of distribution of the drug The actual amount of drug removed by HD is the product of the concentration of the drug in the recovered dialysate and the dialysate volume Amount in dialysate
It is not clinically feasible or analytically practical to measure dialysate drug concentration This value divided by total body stores of drug prior to dialysis yield the actual fraction of drug removed by dialysis (FD) FD = amount of dialysate drug / TBs TBS = drug conc. X VD
The following equation may be used to determine the fraction of the total amount of drug in the body removed during dialysis
FD = 1 - e
t is the duration of dialysis
-(Cl+ClD)(t/VD)
be obtained
Unfortunately, clearance dtat are not always available Half life is more available, so we use another equation
FD = 1 - e
Example:
NN on amikacin, Wt 70 kg
Estimated amikacin Cl 5ml/min (endogenous clearance) Under go 4 hr HD (t OD = 4hrs) Calculate the replacement dose for NN?? Assuming VD= 0.2 L/Kg ClD = 35 ml/min
Answer:
ClT = Cl + ClD
= 5 + 35 = 40 ml/min = 2.4 L/hr Then t1/2 = 0.693 X VD Cl + ClD 0.693 X 0.2L/Kg X 70 Kg 2.4 L/hr 4 hrs
=
=
FD = 1 - e
Or
-(Cl+ClD)(t/VD)
FD = 1 - e