
Vol. 25, No. 1, 2007
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Paper
Treatment Time and Ultrafiltration Rate Are More Important in Dialysis Prescription than Small Molecule Clearance
Zbylut J. Twardowski
Department of Medicine, Division of Nephrology, University of Missouri, Columbia, Mo., USA
Address of Corresponding Author
Blood Purif 2007;25:90-98 (DOI: 10.1159/000096403)
Key Words
- Dialysis duration
- Ultrafiltration
- Sodium profiling
- Hypotension, intradialytic
- Hypertension
- Kt/Vurea
- Lag phenomenon
Abstract
Chronic hemodialysis sessions, as developed in Seattle in the 1960s, were long procedures with minimal intra- and interdialytic symptoms. Over the next three decades, dialysis duration was shorten to 4, 3, even 2 h in thrice weekly schedules. This method spread rapidly, particularly in the United States, after the National Cooperative Dialysis Study suggested that the time of dialysis is of minor importance as long as urea clearance multiplied by dialysis time and scaled to total body water (Kt/Vurea) equals 0.95-1.0. This number was later increased to 1.3, but the assumption that hemodialysis time is of minimal importance remained unchanged. However, Kt/Vurea measures only the removal of low molecular weight substances and does not consider the removal of larger molecules. Nor does it correlate with the other important function of hemodialysis, namely ultrafiltration. Rapid ultrafiltration is associated with cramps, nausea, vomiting, headache, fatigue, hypotensive episodes during dialysis, and hangover after dialysis; patients remain fluid overloaded with subsequent poor blood pressure control leading to left ventricular hypertrophy, diastolic dysfunction, and high cardiovascular mortality. Kt/Vurea should be abandoned as a measure of dialysis quality. The formula suggests that it is possible to decrease t as long as K is proportionately increased, but this is not true. Time of dialysis should be adjusted in such a way that patients would not suffer from symptoms related to rapid ultrafiltration, would not have other uremic symptoms and most patients would have blood pressure controlled without antihypertensive drugs. Copyright © 2007 S. Karger AG, Basel
Author Contacts Zbylut J. Twardowski, MD Dialysis Clinic, Inc. 3300 LeMone Industrial Blvd Columbia, MO 65201 (USA) E-Mail Twardowskiz@health.missouri.edu
Article Information
Published online: December 14, 2006
Number of Print Pages : 9
Number of Figures : 0, Number of Tables : 0, Number of References : 93 |
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