| Literature DB >> 29582148 |
Abstract
Adequacy of dialysis is a term that has been used for many years based on measurement of small solute clearance using urea and creatinine. This has been shown in some but not all studies in adults to correlate with survival. However, small solute clearance is just one minor part of the effectiveness of dialysis and in fact 'optimum' dialysis, rather than 'adequate' dialysis is what most paediatric nephrologists would want for their patients. Additional ways to assess the success of dialysis in children would include dialysis access complications and longevity, preservation of residual kidney function, body composition, biochemical and haematological control, nutrition and growth, discomfort during the dialysis process and psychosocial adjustment including hospitalisation and school attendance. These criteria need to be balanced against a dialysis programme that has the least possible adverse effects on quality of life.Entities:
Keywords: Adequacy; Dialysis; Optimum dialysis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29582148 PMCID: PMC6244854 DOI: 10.1007/s00467-018-3914-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Nephrol ISSN: 0931-041X Impact factor: 3.714
Fig. 1Ensuring optimal dialysis: access is crucial
Fig. 2The malnutrition, inflammation, arteriosclerosis syndrome (MIA complex)
What ways do we have to improve the dialysis process and how can we assess whether optimum dialysis has been achieved?
| Optimum dialysis | How can this be assessed? |
|---|---|
| Well-functioning, long-lasting access with no complications | Compliance with ‘fistula first’ policy |
| Maintaining RKF | Urine output and use of diuretics |
| Target weight maintained, with normal BP without antihypertensives and no LVH | BP SDS, ECHO and number of antihypertensive medications |
| No discomfort during dialysis or intradialytic hypotension | Percentage with pain interfering with PD. Intradialytic weight gains and UF rates < 13 ml/kg/h |
| No anaemia, acidosis, or potassium, calcium, phosphate or PTH disturbance | Audit of haematological and biochemical control |
| Good nutrition and growth | Urea, albumin, Ht SDS, Wt SDS, head circumference SDS and pubertal development |
| No hospitalisations for complications | Hospitalisation rates |
| Psychosocial care provided and educational input | Access to social workers, psychologists and play therapists. Assessment of HRQoL-targeted educational needs and good school attendance |
RFK residual kidney function, LVH left ventricular hypertrophy, PTH parathyroid hormone, BP blood pressure, SDS standard deviation score, PD peritonal dialysis, UF ultrafiltration