For
realization of a wearable artificial kidney based on regeneration
of a small volume of dialysate, efficient urea removal from dialysate
is a major challenge. Here a potentially suitable polymeric sorbent
based on phenylglyoxaldehyde (PGA), able to covalently bind urea under
physiological conditions, is described. Sorbent beads containing PGA
groups were obtained by suspension polymerization of either styrene
or vinylphenylethan-1-one (VPE), followed by modification of the aromatic
groups of poly(styrene) and poly(VPE) into PGA. It was found that
PGA-functionalized sorbent beads had maximum urea binding capacities
of 1.4–2.2 mmol/g and removed ∼0.6 mmol urea/g in 8
h at 37 °C under static conditions from urea-enriched phosphate-buffered
saline, conditions representative of dialysate regeneration. This
means that the daily urea production of a dialysis patient can be
removed with a few hundred grams of this sorbent which, is an important
step forward in the development of a wearable artificial kidney.
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