Heparin-free haemodialysis must be considered for all dialysis patients with a risk of haemorrhage. This technique is associated with increased danger of system coagulation with a blood loss of up to 250 ml. In 84 patients with a risk of haemorrhage, 296 heparin-free haemodialyses were recorded prospectively. First signs of coagulation were found very much more frequently in the venous airtrap than in the dialyser (146 vs 42). System coagulation occurred in 13 of the 296 dialyses (4%) and was prevented by prophylactic switching of the system and dialyser in 140 dialyses (47%). The time of system coagulation was on average 1.8 hours (+/- 0.2) after the beginning of dialysis. The 13 patients with system coagulation had a reduced blood flow on dialysis (217 +/- 52 vs 240 +/- 36 ml/min). Their initially normal clotting time (12 +/- 5 vs 14 +/- 4 min) was more significantly shortened after 2 h (4 +/- 3 vs 8 +/- 3 min). The activities of antithrombin III (87 +/- 34% vs 88 +/- 39%) and protein C (66 +/- 45% vs 59 +/- 37%) do not differ from those of 47 other patients, even at the time of system coagulation, as measured in five patients (92 +/- 34% for antithrombin III, 51 +/- 29% for protein C). System coagulation and shortening of clotting time thus cannot be regarded as a consequence of absorption of these inhibitory factors of plasmatic coagulation. The danger of system coagulation in heparin-free haemodialysis could probably be further reduced by an improvement of the biocompatibility of systems (airtrap) and dialysers (less activation of thrombocytes).
Using these kind of index thresholds and online analysis of BV curves, automatic management of ultrafiltration by BV dynamics could be a promising concept to avoid intradialytic morbidity.
The decrease of end-stage analgesic nephropathy since 1983 may be partially due to the removal of phenacetin from the German market in 1986. However, considering the general increase in numbers of dialysis patients, their higher age and the increased incidence of type II diabetes, the decrease in analgesic nephropathy is not a statistically significant independent variable. Altered admittance policies for dialysis treatment have yielded a new pattern of renal-disease proportion which interferes with changes in the incidence of analgesic nephropathy.
Heparinization during hemodialysis may cause severe bleeding complications in patients with high bleeding risk. Heparin-free hemodialyses (n = 208) were performed in 46 unselected patients with high bleeding risk after kidney transplantation (n = 25), after major surgery (n = 10), and with bleeding disorders (n = 11). Dialyser and blood lines were primed without heparin. In addition to the established measures (high blood flow, intermittent rinsing), system clotting was prevented by prophylactically changing the dialyser and blood lines in 107 of 208 dialyses (52 percent). Total system clotting with blood loss ranging from 100 to 250 ml occurred in six cases (3 percent). Mean hemodialysis time (+/- SD) was 4.1 hours (+/- 0.4), rising volume of the extracorporeal system 1.4 liters/hour (+/- 0.6), blood flow 244 ml/min (+/- 38), clotting time 12 min (+/- 4), and weight loss 2.5 kg (+/- 1.5). Mean hemodialysis creatinine clearance was 110 ml/min (+/- 34) and BUN clearance 138 ml/min (+/- 48). Heparin-free hemodialysis with prophylactic change of system is thus a safe and practical method of treatment for patients at high bleeding risk, but it is less effective, more expensive and the patient requires closer care.
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