| Literature DB >> 26303208 |
Davina J Tai1, Kelvin Leung2, Pietro Ravani3,4, Robert R Quinn5,6, Nairne Scott-Douglas7, Jennifer M MacRae8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Unfractionated heparin is the most common anticoagulant used in haemodialysis (HD), although it has many potential adverse effects. Citrate dialysate (CD) has an anticoagulant effect which may allow reduction in cumulative heparin dose (CHD) compared to standard acetate dialysate (AD).Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26303208 PMCID: PMC4548909 DOI: 10.1186/s12882-015-0144-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Nephrol ISSN: 1471-2369 Impact factor: 2.388
Fig. 1Study Flow Diagram
Visual Clotting Score and Heparin Protocol
| Clotting Score | Dialyser/Venous Chamber Appearance (at the end of each HD session) | Heparin Dose Adjustment (for the next HD session) |
|---|---|---|
| 0 | Clear | Decreasea boost by 200 units |
| 1 | Few strands/small clot | Decreasea boost by 200 units |
| 2 | ½ clotted | Increase boost by 200 units |
| 3 | ¾ clotted (able to return blood) | Increase boost by 300 units |
| 4 | Completely clotted (unable to return blood) | Increase boost by 400 units |
HD haemodialysis
NOTE
1) If there is unusually prolonged bleeding from vascular access sites post-HD, for the next HD session, decreasea heparin running dose by 200 units/h and turn heparin off 30 min earlier than usual
2) If there is a discrepancy in score between the dialyser and the venous chamber, the heparin dose adjustment is based on the dialyser clotting score
aThe minimum possible heparin boost and running dose are 500 units (boost) and 500 units/h. If the heparin dose is to be decreased to less than 500 units (boost and/or running dose) for the next HD session, discontinue the boost and/or the running dose