| Literature DB >> 33067481 |
Masaaki Nakayama1,2,3, Chieko Hamada4, Keitaro Yokoyama5, Yudo Tanno5, Nanae Matsuo5, Junichiro Nakata4, Yoshio Ishibashi6, Atsushi Okuzawa7, Kazuhiro Sakamoto7, Tamaki Nara8, Takatoshi Kakuta9, Masaomi Nangaku10, Takashi Yokoo5, Yusuke Suzuki4, Toshio Miyata11.
Abstract
The ability to visualize intraluminal surface of peritoneal dialysis (PD) catheter and peritoneal cavity could allow elucidation of the cases of outflow problems, and provide information on changes to the peritoneal membrane leading to encapsulating peritoneal sclerosis. A non-invasive examination that allows those monitoring in need is desirable. We have developed a disposable ultra-fine endoscope that can be inserted into the lumen of the existing PD catheter, allowing observation of the luminal side of the catheter and peritoneal cavity from the tip of the PD catheter, with minimum invasion in practice. In a pre-clinical study in pigs and a clinical study in 10 PD patients, the device provided detailed images, enabling safe, easy observation of the intraluminal side of the entire catheter, and of the morphology and status of the peritoneal surface in the abdominal cavity under dwelling PD solution. Since this device can be used repeatedly during PD therapy, clinical application of this device could contribute to improved management of clinical issues in current PD therapy, positioning PD as a safer, more reliable treatment modality for end-stage renal disease.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33067481 PMCID: PMC7567793 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-74129-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Endoscopic findings for the intraluminal side of the PD catheter and peritoneal surface using the PD endoscope in pigs (Supplementary S1: online). (a) Close-up image of omental extrusion through a side hole in the PD catheter. (b) Close-up image of peritoneal blood vessels on the visceral surface (capillaries, small and medium-sized veins). (c) Distant image of peritoneal blood vessels in the parietal wall. (d) Distant image of the parietal (upper) and visceral (lower) surface. In close-up images, approximate length of the image can be estimated by the lumen diameter of the guiding catheter tip. *Intra-luminal portion of the guiding catheter (yellow portion).
Patients demographics and summary of endoscopic findings.
| No. | Gender | Age (years) | PD vintage (months) | Modality | Underlying kidney disease | PET | Number of peritonitis history | Endoscopic findings presence/detection of ① mocrovessles, ② morphologic change of local vasculature, ③ localized (L) or extended (E) membrane formation, ④ localized fibrin exudate/deposit in peritoneum, and ⑤ fibrin clot/fragment in the intraluminal side of catheter | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ① | ② | ③ | ④ | ⑤ | ||||||||
| 1 | Male | 63 | 40 | PD | IgAN | H | None | ○ | ○ | |||
| 2 | Male | 66 | 27 | PD | CGN | H | None | ○ | ○ | ○ | ○ | |
| 3 | Male | 64 | 4 | PD | DKD | HA | None | ○ | ○ | ○ | ||
| 4 | Male | 48 | 19 | PD | DKD | LA | None | ○ | ○ (L) | ○ | ○ | |
| 5 | Male | 51 | 9 | PD | DKD | LA | None | ○ | ○ | |||
| 6 | Male | 61 | 77 | PD + HD | DKD | HA | 1 | ○ | ||||
| 7 | Male | 56 | 36 | PD | Unknown | LA | None | ○ | ||||
| 8 | Male | 70 | 42 | PD | IgAN | L | 1 | ○ | ○ (E) | ○ | ||
| 9 | Male | 66 | 65 | PD + HD | IgAN | HA | 1 | ○ | ○ (L) | |||
| 10 | Female | 53 | 39 | PD + HD | Unknown | LA | 1 | ○ | ○ | |||
PD peritoneal dialysis, HD hemodialysis, PD + HD combination therapy of PD and HD, CGN chronic glomerulonephritis, DKD diabetic kidney disease, IgAN IgA nephritis, PET peritoneal equilibration test, H high, HA high average, LA low average, L low
Figure 2Endoscopic findings for the intraluminal side of the PD catheter and peritoneal surface using the PD endoscope in patients on PD. (A) Intraluminal side of the PD catheter: Fibrin fragment in the catheter lumen in three patients, fibrin aggregation sticking to the lumen (a) (Supplementary S2 online), and fibrin floating in the lumen (b, c). (B) Microvessels: Close-up image of veins and post-capillary venule of the parietal wall (a), capillaries of the visceral membrane surface (b), and spider-like winding microvessels on the visceral membrane (c). (C) Parietal and visceral walls: Distant image of the visceral surface with no marked findings (a, b), and surface of the visceral peritoneum with spotted small ecchymosis (c). (D) Fibrin deposits and membrane formation in three cases: Case No. 3, 64 years old, 4 months on PD, underlying kidney disease; diabetic nephropathy. Patchy white color changes noted on the parietal wall (a), aggregated fibrin clot on the visceral surface (b), and presence of aggregated fibrin bridging both sides of the parietal wall and intestine surface (c). Case No. 8, 70 years old, after 42 months on PD, underlying kidney disease; IgA nephropathy (Supplementary S3 online). Surface of the parietal (upper) and visceral (lower) peritoneum. Presence of translucent membrane with patchy white fibrin mass (d). Surface of the intestine is visible through a gap in the fibrin mass on the translucent membrane (e). Surfaces of the parietal (Rt) and visceral (Lt) peritoneum. Fibrin sheet is present on part of visceral surface (Lt upper side*) (f). Case No. 9, 66 years old, after 65 months on PD, underlying kidney disease; IgA nephropathy. Translucent membrane is present covering the original parietal membrane (g), visceral (Lt upper) and parietal surface with membrane extending on both sides (h). Endoscopic images (Figs. 1, 2) reflected by camera (3CMOS HD Camera FC-304: FiberTec Co., Ltd. Japan) were edited by Adobe Premiere Elements 2020 (https://www.adobe.com/jp/products/premiere-elements).
Figure 3Structure of the disposable ultra-fine endoscope for PD. Details of the ultra-fine endoscope (a) and deflectable guiding catheter (b), and images of endoscopic manipulation (c). The inserted portion of the main endoscope and the deflectable guiding catheter have an external hydrophilic coating to facilitate smooth passage into the lumen of the deflectable guiding catheter and lumen of the PD catheter. Figures were drawn by AUTOCAD (https://www.autodesk.co.jp/products/autocad/overview).