Four hundred and eighty CAPD and 373 HD patients started regular dialysis treatment between 1981 and 1987 in 6 dialysis centers. The CAPD patients were 6 years older, on average, than the HD patients and had more complicating conditions (43.3% with 3 or more coexisting risk factors versus 28.9% with coexisting complications). The 7-year patient survival rate was not significantly different. Cox's proportional hazards regression showed that age, cardiovascular disease, cerebrovasculardisease, peripheral vasculardisease, diabetes, malignancy and multisystem disease had significant adverse effects on patient survival. After correcting for the influence of these factors, no significant differences in patient survival were seen. However, after 53.5 years of age, the increase in the risk of death was significantly higher in HD than in CAPD patients. Technique survival was significantly different in the 6 centers and was better for HD than for CAPD. There was no statistically significant difference between CAPD and HD technique survival when peritonitis was eliminated as a cause of failure. Based on this 7 year analysis, CAPD would appear to be an excellent alternative to HD.
The treatment of acute renal failure (ARF) in the newborn with hemo- or peritoneal dialysis is technically difficult and may even be contraindicated. As in the adult, continuous arterio-venous hemofiltration (CAVH) may be an alternative therapy. We used CAVH in the treatment of four newborns with ARF of different etiology. Two brachial, one femoral and one umbilical arteries were cannulated as arterial access, while three jugular and one umbilical veins were used as venous return. An Amicon 0.005 m2 Polysulphon Hollow Fiber hemofilter was connected to the patient with shortened pediatric hemodialysis lines. Total blood volume of the extracorporeal circuit was 15 to 22 ml. Before starting the procedure, an initial bolus of heparin was administered to the patient (100 i.u./kg body wt) and a successive continuous heparin administration was provided during the treatment at the rate of 5 to 7 i.u./kg/hr. Hyperalimentation and/or buffer solutions were used as replacement fluids and were administered according to the patient's fluid balance. mean data in the four patients are summarized as follows. The age of the patients ranged from two to 12 days, while the average body weight was about 3 kg. The ultrafiltration rate during the treatment averaged 0.9 ml/min with a plasma flow ranging from 9.8 to 19.6 ml/min. The treatment duration varied from 30 to 86 hrs. The treatment was well tolerated (patients 1 and 2 recovered, and patients 3 and 4 died due to complications unrelated to the treatment). Arterial pressure remained stable during the procedure. Metabolic acidosis, when present, was corrected by increasing the amount of buffer administered. BUN was maintained below 60 mg/dl in three patients.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Several patients undergoing chronic renal replacement therapy present problems related to their vascular access. Low blood flows and high rates of recirculation are common in such patients in which, for this reason, it becomes difficult to apply highly efficient techniques or techniques where diffusion and convection are combined as in hemodiafiltration. In these patients we studied the possibility of partially recirculating the blood in the extracorporeal circuit in order to increase the flow rate per single hollow fiber; we defined our system "double pass dialysis". We evaluated the system's efficiency in 12 patients during 24 dialysis sessions: 12 high flux dialysis sessions (without reinfusion) and 12 hemodiafiltration sessions (9 liters reinfusion). Different surfaces of polyacrylonitrile dialyzers were utilized (1.3-1.7-2.1 sqm) at 250 and 350 ml/min of blood flow with or without 100 ml/min of recirculation. During each dialysis session blood and dialysate samples were taken in order to calculate BUN, Creatinine, Phosphate and Inuline clearances from both the blood and dialysate side. The clearances of low molecular weight solutes were not really influenced by the artificial increase of the blood flow, but on the other hand, the clearances of higher molecular weight solutes increased from 10 to 30% during both high flux dialysis and hemodiafiltration with recirculation. This increase was evident mostly in hemodiafiltration suggesting that the cleaning effect on the membrane has a positive impact on the permeability. The good clinical results obtained with the double pass dialysis show that the system is safe and reliable and may become a valid support in critical situations in order to reach adequate dialysis treatment.
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