No abstract
Patients with end-stage renal disease treated by hemodialysis with bioincompatible membranes are exposed during the dialysis period to acute effects on lung microcirculation, which may result in pulmonary fibrosis and diffusion defects in long-standing dialysis. To investigate the occurrence of these possible chronic pulmonary alterations, we determined lung function in patients with chronic renal failure not undergoing hemodialysis and in patients who had been receiving regular hemodialysis both for short and long periods of time. Forty-three patients divided into three groups were studied: 17 patients before dialysis with a mean (SD) creatinine clearance of 14.1 (6.8) ml/min 11.73 m2, 10 patients receiving regular hemodialysis for a period of less than 12 months (mean 6.4 +/- 3.5 months), and 16 patients receiving regular hemodialysis for more than 5 years (mean 8.3 +/- 3.6 years). First-use bioincompatible cellulosic dialysis membranes were used in all the cases. The following parameters were recorded: forced vital capacity (FVC), forced expiratory volume in 1s (FEV1), total lung capacity (TLC), residual volume (RV), carbon monoxide transfer factor (TLCO), accessible lung volume (VA), carbon monoxide transfer factor/accessible lung volume (KCO- that is, TLCO/VA), and arterial blood gases. Patients receiving regular hemodialysis for more than 5 years showed significantly lower values of TLCO and KCO than patients before dialysis and patients receiving regular hemodialysis for less than 12 months. Seventy-five percent of patients on long-term hemodialysis had markedly reduced TLCO or KCO values (below 80% of the reference value) as compared with 17% of patients before dialysis and 10% of patients dialyzed for less than 12 months (P < 0.001). Differences among groups for the remaining parameters were not observed. In conclusion, patients undergoing long-term regular hemodialysis with a bioincompatible membrane showed a selective reduction in pulmonary diffusing capacity possibly due to chronic pulmonary fibrosis.
Background Protein-energy malnutrition is prevalent in peritoneal dialysis (PD) patients and is associated with increased morbidity and mortality. Objective To evaluate the impact of prophylactic treatment with an oral protein-energy supplement (Protenplus; Fresenius AG, Bad Homburg, Germany) on nutritional parameters in patients starting PD. Design Prospective, multicenter, randomized study of group A patients (Protenplus, n = 35) and group B (controls, n = 30), with evaluations at baseline and at 6 and 12 months. Statistical Methods: Efficacy of factors by linear mixed model analysis for repeated measurements, chi-square, t-test, and Mann–Whitney test. Outcome Parameters Patient compliance, serum albumin, and other nutritional parameters. Results No significant differences were found at baseline evaluation. During follow-up, a significant number of group A patients abandoned intake of the supplement due to noncompliance ( n = 7) or side effects ( n = 8) (χ2 p < 0.01). Patients with lower residual renal function were less likely to comply. The mixed model in the “intention to treat” analysis showed a significant increase related to supplement intake only in total lymphocyte count in group A. The “as treated” analysis of the 29 patients who fulfilled the study (9 in group A, 20 in group B) disclosed that belonging to group A constituted an independent factor for increased lymphocyte count ( p < 0.001), body weight ( p < 0.03), tricipital skinfold thickness ( p < 0.01), middle-arm muscle circumference ( p < 0.025), lean body mass (LBM) ( p < 0.002), creatinine LBM related to body surface area ( p < 0.001), and creatinine generation rate ( p < 0.002). However, these data may have been biased by the high rate of noncompliance in group A. Conclusions Protenplus proved to be unsuitable as a long term, oral protein-energy supplement in PD patients due to a high rate of noncompliance and intolerance, primarily among patients with lower residual renal function. The question of whether other products, better-tolerated as nutritional supplements, could compensate for daily protein peritoneal losses in long-term PD remains open.
We have analyzed some parameters of porphyrin metabolism in 60 patients with end-stage renal failure, 20 of them on CAPD and the remaining on HD. In comparison with 56 control subjects, both groups of patients showed the three following findings: low erythrocyte aminolevulinate dehydrase activity, inhibition ability for the activity of this enzyme when their plasma was incubated in vitro with normal erythrocytes, and increased plasma porphyrin levels. Like anemia, these abnormalities were more remarkable in patients on HD who also exhibited increased erythrocyte protoporphyrin levels and compensatory porphobilinogen deaminase activities. Mean weekly porphyrin removal through dialysate was higher in CAPD (90.8 micrograms) than in HD patients (30.4 micrograms). Dialysate and plasma porphyrins were correlated in both circumstances (r = 0.714, P < 0.01 and r = 0.637, P < 0.05, respectively). The less pronounced porphyrin abnormalities found in CAPD patients with respect to HD patients may be due to the more efficient capability of peritoneal dialysis for removing from plasma protein-bound substances, as porphyrins and inhibitors of aminolevulinate dehydrase or other enzymes involved in erythropoiesis. Since no close relationship was found between these abnormalities of porphyrin metabolism and hematocrit values, the anemia of uremia cannot be merely considered as a direct consequence of altered heme biosynthetic pathway.
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