In this patient population, a common source of increasing base deficit is related to chloride administration. The largest source of chloride is usually normal saline. Classically, dilutional acidosis would explain the predominance of this acidotic change; however, no increase in plasma volume occurred. The absence of plasma volume change would suggest that the mechanism postulated to result in dilutional acidosis is incomplete. The common treatment of administering more fluid for intraoperative acidosis may be inappropriate, may have caused the acidosis, and may further exacerbate the acidosis. Chloride levels should be assessed whenever a metabolic acidosis is seen perioperatively.
Autopsy reports on 155 successive end-stage renal disease (ESRD) patients and 147 control patients without ESRD, matched for age, race and gender, were collected. Cystic transformation of the kidneys was noted in 58% of the ESRD patients and 13.6% of the control patients. There were 25 ESRD patients with renal adenoma and 3 with renal cell carcinoma. The single best predictor of cystic transformation or tumorous degeneration was patient’s age. A statistically significant association between cystic transformation and gender, as well as the cause of ESRD, was also found. In contrast to previous reports we were unable to document a strong association between the incidence of either cystic transformation or tumorous degeneration with the duration of dialysis, nor did these two parameters correlate with mode of dialysis. We suggest that cystic transformation of the kidneys in ESRD is related to age and renal failure per se, is not strongly associated with duration of dialysis and is independent of mode of dialysis. Concomitant tumorous degeneration was frequent, but this was usually an incidental autopsy finding. Renal malignancy was uncommon and metastases were absent.
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