Increasing dialysate flow rate increases dialyzer urea mass transfer-area coefficients during clinical use

被引:58
作者
Ouseph, R [1 ]
Ward, RA [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Louisville, Dept Med, Div Nephrol, Kidney Dis Program, Louisville, KY 40202 USA
关键词
hemodialysis (HD); clearance; mass transfer area coefficient (K(o)A); blood flow rate (Q(B)); hematocrit;
D O I
10.1053/ajkd.2001.21296
中图分类号
R5 [内科学]; R69 [泌尿科学(泌尿生殖系疾病)];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Dialyzer clearance depends on blood and dialysate flow rates and the product of the membrane surface area and mass transfer coefficient for the solute of interest, K(o)A. K(o)A is usually assumed to be constant for a given dialyzer end solute. Results of two recent studies challenge this assumption. Therefore, we examined the hypothesis that K(o)A depends on blood and dialysate flow rates during clinical dialysis, Urea clearances were measured for two different dialyzers at all four combinations of two blood flow rates (300 and 400 mL/min) and two dialysate flow rates (500 and 800 mL/min), Urea K(o)A was calculated by using standard equations for mass transfer in dialyzers operated with countercurrent flows. The impact of blood and dialysate flow rates on K(o)A was assessed by analysis of variance. Increasing dialysate flow rate from 500 to 800 mL/min significantly increased K(o)A (P = 0.018). Increasing blood flow rate from 300 to 400 mL/min did not significantly increase K(o)A (P = 0.083). Also, K(o)A decreased significantly with increasing hematocrit (P = 0.022). The results of this study extend previous in vitro findings by showing that increasing the dialysate flow rate increases urea K(o)A during clinical dialysis. However, the increase in K(o)A observed during clinical dialysis (5.7%) is less than that previously reported in vitro (14.7%), possibly because of the impact of blood cells and proteins on blood-side mass transfer resistance. (C) 2001 by the National Kidney Foundation, Inc.
引用
收藏
页码:316 / 320
页数:5
相关论文
共 12 条
[1]   Synthetically modified cellulose (SMC) - A cellulosic hemodialysis membrane with minimized complement activation [J].
Bowry, SK ;
Rintelen, TH .
ASAIO JOURNAL, 1998, 44 (05) :M579-M583
[2]  
COLTON C K, 1970, Chemical Engineering Progress Symposium Series, V66, P85
[3]  
COLTON CK, 1981, KIDNEY, V2, P2425
[4]   In vivo effects of dialysate flow rate on Kt/V in maintenance hemodialysis patients [J].
Hauk, M ;
Kuhlmann, MK ;
Riegel, W ;
Köhler, H .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF KIDNEY DISEASES, 2000, 35 (01) :105-111
[5]  
HOOTKINS R, 1995, SEMIN DIALYSIS, V8, P53
[6]   Hemodialyzer mass transfer-area coefficients for urea increase at high dialysate flow rates [J].
Leypoldt, JK ;
Cheung, AK ;
Agodoa, LY ;
Daugirdas, JT ;
Greene, T ;
Keshaviah, PR .
KIDNEY INTERNATIONAL, 1997, 51 (06) :2013-2017
[7]  
MICHAELS AS, 1966, T AM SOC ART INT ORG, V12, P387
[8]   EFFECT OF FLOW MALDISTRIBUTION ON HOLLOW FIBER DIALYSIS - EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES [J].
NODA, I ;
BROWNWEST, DG ;
GRYTE, CC .
JOURNAL OF MEMBRANE SCIENCE, 1979, 5 (02) :209-225
[9]   Impact of spacing filaments external to hollow fibers on dialysate flow distribution and dialyzer performance [J].
Ronco, C ;
Scabardi, M ;
Goldoni, M ;
Brendolan, A ;
Crepaldi, C ;
LaGreca, G .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ARTIFICIAL ORGANS, 1997, 20 (05) :261-266
[10]   DIFFERENCES BETWEEN KT/V MEASURED DURING DIALYSIS AND KT/V PREDICTED FROM MANUFACTURER CLEARANCE DATA [J].
SAHA, LK ;
VANSTONE, JC .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ARTIFICIAL ORGANS, 1992, 15 (08) :465-469