| Literature DB >> 32103726 |
Pei-Yi Kuo1,2, Rajiv Saran3,4, Marissa Argentina5, Michael Heung3, Jennifer Bragg-Gresham3,4, Sarah Krein6,7, Brenda W Gillespie8, Kai Zheng9, Tiffany C Veinot10,11.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hemodialysis sessions frequently become unstable from complications such as intradialytic hypotension and untoward symptoms. Previous patient safety initiatives promote prevention of treatment complications; yet, they have placed little specific focus on avoidable session instability. A patient-centered definition of session instability grounded in patient experiences, and an understanding of patient perceptions of causes and solutions to instability, may enable such efforts.Entities:
Keywords: Complications; Hemodialysis; Patient perspectives; Patient safety; Qualitative
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32103726 PMCID: PMC7045425 DOI: 10.1186/s12882-020-01726-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Nephrol ISSN: 1471-2369 Impact factor: 2.388
Participant Demographics
| Demographics ( | |
|---|---|
| Age group | |
| ≤ 45 y | 5 (20) |
| 46–64 y | 13 (52) |
| ≥ 65 y | 7 (28) |
| Gender | |
| Male | 11 (44) |
| Female | 14 (56) |
| Race/Ethnicity | |
| White | 11 (44) |
| Black or African American | 11 (44) |
| American Indian or Alaska Native | 1 (4) |
| Asian | 1 (4) |
| Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander | 0 |
| Other | 1 (4) |
| Educational Level | |
| High school graduate or equivalent (GED) | 1 (4) |
| Some college | 5 (20) |
| College degree (e.g., AA, AS, BA, BS, MA, MS, PhD, MD, JD) | 19 (76) |
| Current Employment | |
| Working full-time (30 h or more) | 5 (20) |
| Working part-time (less than 30 h) | 3 (12) |
| Unemployed | 4 (16) |
| Retired | 6 (24) |
| Other | 4 (16) |
| Geographical Region | |
| Northeast | 10 (40) |
| Northwest | 1 (4) |
| Midwest | 8 (32) |
| Southwest | 3 (12) |
| Southeast | 3 (12) |
| Monthly Income | |
| $0–$1000 ($0–$12,000 per year) | 3 (12) |
| $1001–$2000 ($12,012–$24,000 per year) | 8 (32) |
| $2001–$3000 ($24,012–$36,000 per year) | 3 (12) |
| $3001–$4000 ($36,012–$48,000 per year) | 4 (16) |
| $4001–$5000 ($48,012–$60,000 per year) | 1 (4) |
| $5001 + (over $60,000 per year) | 3 (12) |
| Years Receiving Dialysis (as of 2017) | |
| Mean (SD); Range | 10.63 (SD = 7.37); 23 |
| Years Since Finding Out Kidney Disease (as of 2017) | |
| Mean (SD); Range | 20.1 (SD = 14.06); 48 |
| Has had a kidney transplant | 7 (28) |
| Kidney transplant is still functioning | 6 (24) |
Note: Percentages are in parentheses
Patient quotes regarding cramping
| Cramping | |
|---|---|
“A type of throbbing pain or cramp that makes a bad run for me.” “My life is gonna be over. And I tell ya they are in my arms, in my legs. They’re in my stomach.” “Cramping like it will break bones...pain enough to consider leaving early or not return” | |
“I used to cramp and I would go home…it’s a Friday, until that Sunday night sometimes or early that Monday, I wouldn’t feel relief.” | |
“…the cramping came from my gaining weight and needing my dry weight to be increased and they were taking too much off.” | |
“…a bad run would be…cramping being on the machine, taking off too much fluid, too fast.” | |
“…I …caused a lot of problems for myself with bad runs by coming in after having drank too much in between treatments and would sit there and cramp severely.” | |
“Low pressure oftentimes leads to cramping. Buildup of lactic acid…hurts like hell.” | |
“Control fluids to avoid cramping, self-managing how much fluid is taken off in a dialogue with the tech…” | |
“Get a little notebook, write it down. What you weigh when you come in and what you weight when you go out. And then you start figuring it out. And you’ll have a better idea of how much fluid you’re ingesting…” | |
“…I could walk out like I’m a brand new person because that salt works. It does wonders…no chips.” | |
“Received extra saline, sometimes turned off the machine, or came off the machine.” “they can’t give you so many fluids to stop it because it defeats the purpose of why you came to dialysis.” | |
“…the nurses and technicians try. They try to massage they try to do what they can. They’re hurting from seeing people hurting… it’s very immediate. So they try what they can. But they can’t bring it down so quickly.” |
Patient quotes regarding crashing
| Crashing | |
|---|---|
“…really completely exhausted. Not the type of exhausted that you feel like you could really just lay down and recover from…you just feel like you’re done for the rest of the day.” | |
“Cause the pressure - when it drops and you feel that weight, you feel nauseous too at the same time…. You start throwing up immediately. I mean uncontrollably sometimes.” | |
“But that passing out thing, you really can’t see or hear. You think you’re responding but you’re not. And people say, “you ain’t saying nothing”. “And just the feeling of, like getting close to losing consciousness or completely losing consciousness is just scary.” “It feels like the world is closing in and my head got extremely light.” | |
“...skin became sweaty and clammy.” | |
“…it first started dropping, it started in the dialysis center. When I first got on and everything it would always drop there. Then after a while, it kept dropping even when I wasn’t there.” | |
“So they did what they were supposed to do - take the fluids off and bring me to my dry weight. But my dry weight was too low, I had gained weight.” | |
“It may be from gaining too much fluid.” | |
“…there are times when I have to run normal dialysis during the day, which is the four-hour dialysis. I find that I have more low blood pressure episodes on that type of dialysis than nocturnal.” | |
“...monitor their diet…make sure that they’re not going over their daily recommended salt intake.” “…gain less weight before they go in for each session.” | |
“...if you haven’t had a decent enough base of carbohydrates, to see you through dialysis, that’s going to lead to crashing.” | |
“…watch for signs of hypotension and telling the tech to stop taking fluid off.” | |
“I would recommend…switching to nocturnal hemodialysis, because I have less low blood pressure episodes on that.” | |
“I had a nurse that…suggested drinking a cup of cold ice water, and that actually helps me recover a lot quicker from the low blood pressure episodes.” | |
“My doctor and I played around with my blood pressure medication, so basically on dialysis nights, I just hold my blood pressure medication….” | |
“…they’ll take less of, they’ll do anything they can, to keep you from crashing.” | |
“…cut back the goal on the machine or just stopped the machine from pulling more fluid depending on the severity of the issue.” | |
“…resolving the low blood pressure problem..[i]t would either be fluid or it would be the broth.” | |
“Your blood pressure could drop…they have to tilt your chair back and try and give you fluid.” |
Patient quotes regarding cannulating-related problems and clotting of the dialysis circuit or vascular access
“Have pain in the access area.” “…if they hit a nerve…it causes pain throughout the entire run, which is really not comfortable.” | |
“Do we actually lose time? If it takes a half hour to stick us, do we cut that time off” | |
“Bad sticks that lead to infiltration, short treatment or almost no treatment.” “I had a bad run when I was stuck wrong and my blood was oozing out of my venous line and it came out even more till we had to stop the treatment….” | |
“One time I had the needles put too close together and after all…three and a half hours of treatment, I was never dialyzed…that was a bad thing.” | |
“…you have some techs that are really familiar with you, they can…get you in, Some techs you’re just kinda nervous about ‘cause they may or may not infiltrate you, which means you can’t dialyze that day.” | |
“…patients ask other techs to see if they can put you on as opposed to that particular tech that you’re assigned to.” | |
“It could also involve being infiltrated by the person cannulating me, which is part of the reason I switched to buttonholes.” | |
“Ice pack on the infiltration…” | |
“Sometimes it could be a problem with your access site, it might clot off for whatever reason.” “…I go in early, go in and they take the stethoscope, listen for the thrill sound if it’s running and if it’s not that’s a bad run; cause I can’t run. I now have to go in and get a de-clot.” | |
“Yeah. Two weeks in a row.” “It could also involve clotting, which rarely occurred.” | |
“Sometimes it could be a problem with your access site, it might clot off for whatever reason and most of the time people who end the treatment early just don’t feel well, they just wanna get off the machine.” | |
“The problem is, is that my graft doesn’t follow the rules. I follow them, my graf doesn’t. …because I have a blood disorder, that clots.” | |
None | |
“I have to wait till the surgeon can get me in, to do a de-clot.” | |
“I’m not sure if all of the patients are having to go without heparin if they’re on Coumadin now, but I believe that’s what our unit was following. They have to give me heparin.” |