Journal Watch
PD and Dialysis Patient Employment
In a Swedish study, 4,734 working-age (20-60 years old) patients who survived at least one year on in-center HD or PD were compared. Patients using PD had a 4% increased probability of employment over in-center HD—as well as a 6% lower disability pension and higher work income. Read the abstract
Read the abstract » | (added 2018-10-12)
Tags: PD, HD, Employment, Disability Pension, Work Income
Nocturnal HD vs. Transplant: Health-related Quality of Life Compared
In a small study, transplant candidates using nocturnal HD (n=41) and transplant patients (n=31) took the KDQOL-short-form survey of health-related quality of life (HRQOL). Those with transplants had significantly higher “effects” of kidney disease scores than those on nocturnal HD. The other domains were not significant. Read the abstract.
Read the abstract » | (added 2018-10-12)
Tags: Transplant, Nocturnal HD, Kdqol, HRQOL, Effects Of Kidney Disease
MXene Sorbents: A Step Toward a WAK
A sorbent tested for use in a wearable artificial kidney was able to adsorb urea with 99% efficiency in testing—twice the level removed with standard dialysate. The hemocompatible sorbent did not damage cells or reduce cell viability at the concentrations tested. A successful sorbent product will facilitate the design of a WAK. Read the abstract.
Read the abstract » | (added 2018-10-12)
Tags: Wearable Artificial Kidney, 2D Materials, Urea, MXene, Adsorption, Dialysate
Biocompatible PD Solutions Maintain Membranes Longer
Independently of inflammation, biocompatible PD solutions helped 71 patients keep a steady level of solute transport over 7.5 years, compared to 295 patients who used standard solutions. Read the abstract.
Read the abstract » | (added 2018-09-10)
Tags: Dialysis Solutions, Glucans, Glucose, IL6 Protein, Human, Inflammation, Interleukin 6, Peritoneal Fibrosis, Peritoneum, Peritonitis, Creatinine, Hospitalization, Icodextrin, Peritoneal Dialysis, Peritoneal Membrane
Nocturnal HD is Underused
A new review suggests that the improved outcomes associated with more hours of HD in-center or at home mean that these options should be used more. Read the abstract.
Read the abstract » | (added 2018-09-10)
Tags: Extended Hours, Improved Outcomes, HD, Nocturnal Dialysis, Quality Of Life
5-year study: Predialysis PD Education Saves Lives on PD
Among 398 patients who started PD from 2007-2016, 169 had received predialysis education. After 5 years, this group had a significantly lower rate of peritonitis, a longer median time to a first peritonitis episode, and less risk of death from peritonitis than patients who did not get CKD education. Read the abstract.
Read the abstract » | (added 2018-09-10)
Tags: PD, Predialysis, Peritonitis, Mortality, CKD Education
PD Catheter Outcomes in Low vs. High-Volume Centers
Not surprisingly, patients whose PD catheters were placed at high-volume centers (in Japan) had fewer adverse events, needed feer blood transfusions, and had shorter hospital stays than those from low-volume centers. Read the abstract.
Read the abstract » | (added 2018-09-10)
Tags: PD, Catheter, Hospital volume
Left Atrial Remodeling Not Found After 1 Year of Nocturnal HD
While left ventricular mass has been shown to regress with intensive HD, the same does not seem to hold true for the left atrium, nor did the ejection fraction improve, finds a new study of 37 patients switched from conventional HD. Read the abstract.
Read the abstract » | (added 2018-09-10)
Tags: Cardiac MRI, End stage Renal Disease, Hemodialysis, Left Atrium
Gender and Malnutrition in PD
Do hypoalbumineumia, overhydration, inflammation, and cardiovascular risk affect men and women on PD differently? A small study (N=26 men and 28 women) with comparable BMI found more fluid overload, inflammation, and heart risk in women with low serum albumin than in men. Read the abstract.
Read the abstract » | (added 2018-09-10)
Tags: Gender, Malnutrition, Cardiovascular Risk, Hypoalbuminemia, Inflammation, Overhydration, Peritoneal Dialysis
Color of Used PD Dialysate Gives Diagnostic Clues
A review article proposes a differential diagnosis of various conditions based on a change in the color of PD effluent from clear to red, orange, cloudy, milky white, green, yellow, purple or black.
Read the abstract » | (added 2018-08-13)
Tags: Bloody Effluent, Chyloperitoneum, Peritoneal Dialysis, Peritonitis, Rhabdomyolysis