Peritoneal Dialysis Dose and
Adequacy
On this
page:
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Types of Peritoneal Dialysis
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Testing for Efficiency
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Compliance
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Residual Kidney Function
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Hope Through Research
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For More Information
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About the Kidney Failure
Series
When kidneys
fail, waste products such as
urea and creatinine build up in
the blood. One way to remove
these wastes is a process called
peritoneal dialysis (PD). The
walls of the abdominal cavity
are lined with a membrane called
the peritoneum. During PD, a
mixture of dextrose (sugar),
salt, and other minerals
dissolved in water, called
dialysis solution, is placed in
a person's abdominal cavity
through a catheter. The body's
peritoneal membrane enclosing
the digestive organs allows
waste products and extra body
fluid to pass from the blood
into the dialysis solution.
These wastes then leave the body
when the used solution is
drained from the abdomen. Each
cycle of draining and refilling
is called an exchange. The time
the solution remains in the
abdomen between exchanges is
called the dwell time. During
this dwell time, some of the
dextrose in the solution crosses
the membrane and is absorbed by
the body.
Many factors
affect how much waste and extra
fluid are removed from the
blood. Some factors?such as the
patient's size and the
permeability, or speed of
diffusion, of the
peritoneum?cannot be controlled.
Dialysis solution comes in 1.5-,
2-, 2.5-, or 3-liter bags. The
dialysis dose can be increased
by using a larger bag, but only
within the limits of the
person's abdominal capacity.
Everyone's peritoneum filters
wastes at a different rate. In
some people, the peritoneum does
not allow wastes to enter the
dialysis solution efficiently
enough to make PD feasible.
Other factors
that determine how efficiently a
person's blood is filtered can
be controlled. Controllable
factors include the number of
daily exchanges and the dwell
times. When fresh solution is
first placed in the abdomen, it
draws in wastes rapidly. As the
solution becomes more nearly
saturated with wastes, it cleans
the blood less efficiently. For
example, a patient may perform
one exchange with a 6-hour dwell
time, during which the solution
becomes nearly saturated with
urea. But in the second half of
that dwell time, urea is being
removed from the blood very
slowly. If the patient performed
two exchanges with 3-hour dwell
times instead, the amount of
urea removed would be
substantially greater than that
removed in one 6-hour dwell
time.
Another way
to increase the amount of fluid
and waste drawn into the
peritoneal cavity is to use
dialysis solution with a higher
concentration of dextrose. A
higher dextrose concentration
moves fluid and more wastes into
the abdominal cavity, increasing
both early and long-dwell
exchange efficiency. Eventually,
however, the body absorbs
dextrose from the solution. As
the concentration of dextrose in
the body comes closer to that in
the solution, dialysis becomes
less effective, and fluid is
slowly absorbed from the
abdominal cavity.
Types of Peritoneal Dialysis
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Continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD) is the
most common form of
peritoneal dialysis. |
The three
types of peritoneal dialysis
differ mainly in the schedule of
exchanges. In continuous
ambulatory peritoneal dialysis
(CAPD), the patient empties
a fresh bag of dialysis solution
into the abdomen. After 4 to 6
hours of dwell time (during the
day), the patient returns the
solution containing wastes to
the bag. The patient then
repeats the cycle with a fresh
bag of solution. CAPD does not
require a machine; the process
uses gravity to fill and empty
the abdomen. A typical
prescription for CAPD requires
three or four exchanges during
the day and one long (usually 8
to 10 hours) overnight exchange
as the patient sleeps. The
dialysis solution used for the
overnight exchange may have a
higher concentration of dextrose
so that it removes wastes and
fluid for a longer time.
For added
clearance, a mini-cycler machine
can be used to exchange the
dialysis solution once or
several times overnight as the
patient sleeps. Such additional
exchanges may also help prevent
the body from absorbing
excessive amounts of dextrose
and dialysis solution from the
overnight exchange.
Continuous
cycler-assisted peritoneal
dialysis (CCPD) uses a
machine to fill and empty the
abdomen three to five times
during the night while the
person sleeps. In the morning,
the CCPD patient performs one
exchange with a dwell time that
lasts the entire day. Sometimes
one additional exchange is done
in the mid-afternoon to increase
the amount of waste removed and
to prevent excessive absorption
of fluid. The dialysis solution
used for the long daytime
exchange may have a higher
concentration of dextrose.
Nocturnal
intermittent peritoneal dialysis
(NIPD) is like CCPD, only
the number of overnight
exchanges is greater (six or
more), and the patient does not
perform an exchange during the
day.
NIPD is
usually reserved for patients
with a peritoneum that is able
to transport waste products very
rapidly, or for patients who
still have substantial residual
(remaining) kidney function.
Testing for Efficiency
The tests to
see whether the exchanges are
removing enough urea are
especially important during the
first weeks of dialysis, when
the health care team needs to
determine whether the patient is
receiving an adequate amount, or
dose, of dialysis.
The
peritoneal equilibration test
(often called the PET) measures
how much dextrose has been
absorbed from a bag of infused
dialysis solution, and how much
urea and creatinine have entered
into the solution, during a
4-hour exchange. The peritoneal
transport rate varies from
person to person. People who
have a high rate of transport
absorb dextrose from the
dialysis solution quickly, and
they should be given a dialysis
schedule that avoids exchanges
with a very long dwell time
because they tend to absorb too
much dextrose and dialysis
solution from such exchanges.
In the
clearance test, samples of used
solution drained over a 24-hour
period are collected, and a
blood sample is obtained during
the day when the solution is
collected. The amount of urea in
the solution is compared with
the amount in the blood, to see
how effective the current PD
schedule is in clearing the
blood of urea. If the patient
has more than a few ounces of
urine output per day, the urine
should also be collected during
this period to measure its urea
concentration.
From the used
solution, urine, and blood
measurements, one can compute a
urea clearance, called Kt/V, and
a creatinine clearance rate
(normalized to body surface
area). The residual clearance of
the kidneys is also considered.
Based on these measurements, one
can determine whether the PD
dose is adequate.
If the
laboratory results show that the
dialysis schedule is not
removing enough urea and
creatinine, the doctor may
change the prescription by
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increasing the number of
exchanges per day for
patients treated with CAPD
or per night for patients
treated with CCPD or NIPD
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increasing the volume
(amount of solution in the
bag) of each exchange in
CAPD
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adding an extra, automated
middle-of-the-night exchange
to the CAPD schedule
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adding an extra
middle-of-the-day exchange
to the CCPD schedule
Compliance
One of the
big problems with PD is that
patients sometimes do not
perform all of the exchanges
recommended by their medical
team. They either skip exchanges
or sometimes skip entire
treatment days when using CCPD
or NIPD. Skipping PD treatments
has been shown to increase the
risk of hospitalization and
death.
Residual Kidney Function
Normally the
PD prescription factors in the
amount of residual kidney
function. Residual function
typically falls, although
slowly, over the months or even
years of treatment with PD. This
means that, more often than not,
the number of PD exchanges
prescribed, or the volume of
exchanges, needs to be increased
as residual function falls.
The doctor
should determine the patient's
dose of PD on the basis of
practice guidelines published by
the National Kidney
Foundation's Kidney Disease
Outcomes Quality Initiative
(K/DOQI) Health care providers
should work closely with their
patients to ensure that the
proper PD dose is administered.
To maximize health and prolong
life, patients should follow
instructions carefully to get
the most out of their dialysis
exchanges.
Hope Through Research
The National
Institute of Diabetes and
Digestive and Kidney Diseases
(NIDDK), through its Division of
Kidney, Urologic, and
Hematologic Diseases, supports
several programs and studies
devoted to improving treatment
for patients with progressive
kidney disease and permanent
kidney failure, including
patients on PD.
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The End-Stage Renal Disease
Program
promotes research to reduce
medical problems from bone,
blood, nervous system,
metabolic, gastrointestinal,
cardiovascular, and
endocrine abnormalities in
kidney failure and to
improve the effectiveness of
dialysis and
transplantation. The
research focuses on reusing
hemodialysis membranes and
on using alternative
dialyzer sterilization
methods; on devising more
efficient, biocompatible
membranes; on refining
high-flux hemodialysis; and
on developing criteria for
dialysis adequacy. The
program also seeks to
increase kidney graft and
patient survival and to
maximize quality of life.
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The U.S. Renal Data System
(USRDS)
collects, analyzes, and
distributes information
about kidney failure in the
United States. The USRDS is
funded directly by NIDDK in
conjunction with the Centers
for Medicare & Medicaid
Services. The USRDS
publishes an Annual Data
Report, which
characterizes the total
population of people with
kidney failure; reports on
incidence, prevalence,
mortality rates, and trends
over time; and develops data
on the effects of various
treatment modalities. The
report also helps identify
problems and opportunities
for more focused special
research on kidney issues.