| Literature DB >> 26714808 |
Christophe Vinsonneau1, Emma Allain-Launay2, Clarisse Blayau3, Michael Darmon4, Damien Ducheyron5, Theophile Gaillot6, Patrick M Honore7, Etienne Javouhey8, Thierry Krummel9, Annie Lahoche10, Serge Letacon11, Matthieu Legrand12, Mehran Monchi13, Christophe Ridel14, René Robert15, Frederique Schortgen16, Bertrand Souweine17, Patrick Vaillant18, Lionel Velly19, David Osman20, Ly Van Vong21.
Abstract
Acute renal failure (ARF) in critically ill patients is currently very frequent and requires renal replacement therapy (RRT) in many patients. During the last 15 years, several studies have considered important issues regarding the use of RRT in ARF, like the time to initiate the therapy, the dialysis dose, the types of catheter, the choice of technique, and anticoagulation. However, despite an abundant literature, conflicting results do not provide evidence on RRT implementation. We present herein recommendations for the use of RRT in adult and pediatric intensive care developed with the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation (GRADE) system by an expert group of French Intensive Care Society (SRLF), with the participation of the French Society of Anesthesia and Intensive Care (SFAR), the French Group for Pediatric Intensive Care and Emergencies (GFRUP), and the French Dialysis Society (SFD). The recommendations cover 4 fields: criteria for RRT initiation, technical aspects (access routes, membranes, anticoagulation, reverse osmosis water), practical aspects (choice of the method, peritoneal dialysis, dialysis dose, adjustments), and safety (procedures and training, dialysis catheter management, extracorporeal circuit set-up). These recommendations have been designed on a practical point of view to provide guidance for intensivists in their daily practice.Entities:
Keywords: Anticoagulation; Citrate; Continuous renal replacement therapy; Dialysis dose; Hemodialysis; Recommendations; Renal replacement therapy
Year: 2015 PMID: 26714808 PMCID: PMC4695466 DOI: 10.1186/s13613-015-0093-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Intensive Care ISSN: 2110-5820 Impact factor: 6.925