| Literature DB >> 26034593 |
Georgi Abraham1, Santosh Varughese2, Milly Mathew3, Madhusudan Vijayan3.
Abstract
Various modalities of renal replacement therapy (RRT) are available for the management of acute kidney injury (AKI) and end-stage renal disease (ESRD). While developed countries mainly use hemodialysis as a form of RRT, peritoneal dialysis (PD) has been increasingly utilized in developing countries. Chronic PD offers various benefits including lower cost, home-based therapy, single access, less requirement of highly trained personnel and major infrastructure, higher number of patients under a single nephrologist with probably improved quality of life and freedom of activities. PD has been found to be lifesaving in the management of AKI in patients in developing countries where facilities for other forms of RRT are not readily available. The International Society of Peritoneal Dialysis has published guidelines regarding the use of PD in AKI, which has helped in ensuring uniformity. PD has also been successfully used in certain special situations of AKI due to snake bite, malaria, febrile illness, following cardiac surgery and in poisoning. Hemodialysis is the most common form of RRT used in ESRD worldwide, but some countries have begun to adopt a 'PD first' policy to reduce healthcare costs of RRT and ensure that it reaches the underserved population.Entities:
Keywords: acute kidney injury; earthquake; intensive care unit pediatrics; peritoneal dialysis
Year: 2015 PMID: 26034593 PMCID: PMC4440475 DOI: 10.1093/ckj/sfv029
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Kidney J ISSN: 2048-8505
Techniques of PD for AKI [19]
| Technique | Description |
|---|---|
| AIPD | Most often used in the past. Frequent and short exchanges with volumes 1–2 L and dialysate flows of 2–6 L/h. Each session lasts 16–20 h, usually tri-session per week. The solute clearance is likely inadequate due to its intermittent nature. |
| Continuous equilibration peritoneal dialysis (CEPD) | Long dwells of 2–6 h with up to 2 L of dialysate each (similar to CAPD). The clearance of small molecules may also be inadequate but clearance of middle molecules is possibly higher due to the long dwells. |
| TPD | Typically involves an initial infusion of 3 L of dialysate into the peritoneal cavity. A portion of dialysate, tidal drain volume (usually 1–1.5 L) is drained and replaced with fresh dialysate (tidal fill volume). The reserve volume always remains in the peritoneal cavity throughout the tidal cycle. |
| HVPD | Continuous therapy proposed to increase high small solute clearances. Frequent exchanges, usually with cycler (18–48 exchanges per 24 h, 2 L per exchange). The total dialysate volume range from 36 to 70 L a day. |
| CFPD | In-flow and out-flow of dialysate occurs simultaneously through two access routes. By inflow of 300 mL/min, it is possible to achieve a high peritoneal urea clearance. |
Fig. 1.(A) Rigid catheter in PD. (B) Flexible swan neck catheter used in PD.
Fig. 2.Utilization of PD for chronic dialysis (prevalence) across the globe.