Literature DB >> 9596086

Effects of controlled blood cooling on hemodynamic stability and urea kinetics during high-efficiency hemodialysis.

A M Kaufman1, A T Morris, V A Lavarias, Y Wang, J F Leung, M B Glabman, S A Yusuf, A L Levoci, H D Polaschegg, N W Levin.   

Abstract

Although the use of cooled dialysate during hemodialysis is associated with stabilization of intradialytic BP, the effects of blood cooling on hemodynamics and urea kinetics in high-efficiency hemodialysis have not been completely studied. In particular, the effects of blood cooling have not been elucidated in very short-time, high K/V dialysis treatments, in which postdialysis urea rebound is maximized. In theory, blood cooling could increase urea compartmentalization during treatment and decrease dialysis efficacy. Measurements of cardiovascular hemodynamics and urea kinetics were performed in 15 patients (56 studies) during dialysis, using a blood temperature monitor with control of dialysate temperature. Dialysate temperature was adjusted to either lower the core temperature or raise the core temperature by, respectively, producing negative heat-energy exchange (cooled dialysis) or keeping heat-energy exchange in the extracorporeal circuit neutral (thermoneutral dialysis) so that energy was not transferred to or from the patient. Each subject was studied on both protocols, thereby allowing each individual to act as his own control. In cooled dialysis, heat-energy exchange in the extracorporeal circuit was -266+/-15 kJ per treatment, and dialysate temperature averaged 35.7+/-0.02 degrees C. In thermoneutral dialysis, heat-energy exchange in the extracorporeal circuit averaged 5+/-31 kJ per treatment, and dialysate temperature averaged 37.1+/-0.02 degrees C. Dialysate cooling resulted in a reduction in mean body temperature compared with thermoneutral therapy (-0.22+/-0.04 versus +0.31+/-0.05 degrees C). Cooling resulted in a greater increase in peripheral vascular resistance index (+515+/-160 versus + 114+/-92 dyn.sec/cm5 per m2), an increase in mean arterial pressure (+4+/-3 versus -4+/-4 mmHg), a reduction in the maximum intradialytic fall in mean arterial pressure (-10+/-2 versus -18+/-3, mmHg), and a reduction in staff interventions for hypotension or dialytic symptoms (6 of 28 versus 12 of 28 studies). These differences occurred without differences in the change in blood volume (-14.3+/-1.8% versus -13.9+/-2.2%) or cardiac index (-0.4+/-0.1 versus -0.4+/-0.2, L/min per m2). Urea rebound (37+/-4% versus 38+/-3%) and effective Kt/V (1.29+/-0.05 versus 1.32+/-0.06) were not different between groups. Thus, body temperature cooling can be used to stabilize BP and reduce intradialytic events requiring staff intervention without compromising the efficacy of treatment in high-efficiency dialysis.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9596086     DOI: 10.1681/ASN.V95877

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Am Soc Nephrol        ISSN: 1046-6673            Impact factor:   10.121


  8 in total

1.  Lower Dialysate Temperature in Hemodialysis: Is It a Cool Idea?

Authors:  Maria-Eleni Roumelioti; Mark L Unruh
Journal:  Clin J Am Soc Nephrol       Date:  2015-07-20       Impact factor: 8.237

Review 2.  Cooling dialysate during in-center hemodialysis: Beneficial and deleterious effects.

Authors:  Stephanie M Toth-Manikowski; Stephen M Sozio
Journal:  World J Nephrol       Date:  2016-03-06

Review 3.  Effect of Lowering the Dialysate Temperature in Chronic Hemodialysis: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.

Authors:  Reem A Mustafa; Fadi Bdair; Elie A Akl; Amit X Garg; Heather Thiessen-Philbrook; Hassan Salameh; Sood Kisra; Gihad Nesrallah; Ahmad Al-Jaishi; Parth Patel; Payal Patel; Ahmad A Mustafa; Holger J Schünemann
Journal:  Clin J Am Soc Nephrol       Date:  2015-12-28       Impact factor: 8.237

4.  Major Outcomes With Personalized Dialysate TEMPerature (MyTEMP): Rationale and Design of a Pragmatic, Registry-Based, Cluster Randomized Controlled Trial.

Authors:  Ahmed A Al-Jaishi; Christopher W McIntyre; Jessica M Sontrop; Stephanie N Dixon; Sierra Anderson; Amit Bagga; Derek Benjamin; David Berry; Peter G Blake; Laura Chambers; Patricia C K Chan; Nicole Delbrouck; P J Devereaux; Luis F Ferreira-Divino; Richard Goluch; Laura Gregor; Jeremy M Grimshaw; Garth Hanson; Eduard Iliescu; Arsh K Jain; Charmaine E Lok; Reem A Mustafa; Bharat Nathoo; Gihad E Nesrallah; Matthew J Oliver; Sanjay Pandeya; Malvinder S Parmar; David Perkins; Justin Presseau; Eli Rabin; Joanna Sasal; Tanya Shulman; Manish M Sood; Andrew Steele; Paul Tam; Daniel Tascona; Davinder Wadehra; Ron Wald; Michael Walsh; Paul Watson; Walter Wodchis; Phillip Zager; Merrick Zwarenstein; Amit X Garg
Journal:  Can J Kidney Health Dis       Date:  2020-02-05

5.  Control of core temperature and blood pressure stability during hemodialysis.

Authors:  Frank M van der Sande; Grzegorz Wystrychowski; Jeroen P Kooman; Laura Rosales; Jochen Raimann; Peter Kotanko; Mary Carter; Christopher T Chan; Karel M L Leunissen; Nathan W Levin
Journal:  Clin J Am Soc Nephrol       Date:  2008-10-08       Impact factor: 8.237

6.  Effect of cool vs. warm dialysate on toxin removal: rationale and study design.

Authors:  Vaibhav Maheshwari; Titus Lau; Lakshminarayanan Samavedham; Gade P Rangaiah
Journal:  BMC Nephrol       Date:  2015-02-27       Impact factor: 2.388

Review 7.  Cold dialysis and its impact on renal patients' health: An evidence-based mini review.

Authors:  Giorgos K Sakkas; Argiro A Krase; Christoforos D Giannaki; Christina Karatzaferi
Journal:  World J Nephrol       Date:  2017-05-06

8.  Effect of various dialysis modalities on intradialytic hemodynamics, tissue injury and patient discomfort in chronic dialysis patients: design of a randomized cross-over study (HOLLANT).

Authors:  Paul A Rootjes; Menso J Nubé; Camiel L M de Roij van Zuijdewijn; Gertrude Wijngaarden; Muriel P C Grooteman
Journal:  BMC Nephrol       Date:  2021-04-15       Impact factor: 2.388

  8 in total

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