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      Praxis der Dialyse 

      Hämodialyse – technische Komponenten

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      Springer Berlin Heidelberg

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          Treatment of acute renal failure secondary to multiple myeloma with chemotherapy and extended high cut-off hemodialysis.

          Extended hemodialysis using a high cut-off dialyzer (HCO-HD) removes large quantities of free light chains in patients with multiple myeloma. However, the clinical utility of this method is uncertain. This study assessed the combination of chemotherapy and HCO-HD on serum free light chain concentrations and renal recovery in patients with myeloma kidney (cast nephropathy) and dialysis-dependent acute renal failure. An open-label study of the relationship between free light chain levels and clinical outcomes in 19 patients treated with standard chemotherapy regimens and HCO-HD. There were sustained early reductions in serum free light chain concentrations (median 85% [range 50 to 97]) in 13 patients. These 13 patients became dialysis independent at a median of 27 d (range 13 to 120). Six patients had chemotherapy interrupted because of early infections and did not achieve sustained early free light chain reductions; one of these patients recovered renal function (at 105 d) the remaining 5 patients did not recover renal function. Patients who recovered renal function had a significantly improved survival (P < 0.012). In dialysis-dependent acute renal failure secondary to myeloma kidney, patients who received uninterrupted chemotherapy and extended HCO-HD had sustained reductions in serum free light chain concentrations and recovered independent renal function.
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            A bench to bedside view of uremic toxins.

            Reviewing the current picture of uremic toxicity reveals its complexity. Focusing on cardiovascular damage as a model of uremic effects resulting in substantial morbidity and mortality, most molecules with potential to affect the function of a variety of cell types within the vascular system are difficult to remove by dialysis. Examples are the larger middle molecular weight molecules and protein-bound molecules. Recent clinical studies suggest that enhancing the removal of these compounds is beneficial for survival. Future therapeutic options are discussed, including improved removal of toxins and the search for pharmacologic strategies blocking responsible pathophysiologic pathways.
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              Effect of a new model of hemodialysis potassium removal on the control of ventricular arrhythmias.

              The primary aim of this multicenter, prospective, randomized cross-over study was to clarify whether a new model of hemodialysis (HD) potassium (K) removal using a decreasing intra-HD dialysate K concentration and a constant plasma-dialysate K gradient (treatment B) is capable of reducing the arrhythmogenic effect of standard HD, which has a constant dialysate K concentration and decreasing plasma-dialysate K gradient (treatment A). The secondary aim was to verify whether this new model is clinically safe. In treatment B, the initial dialysate K concentration had to be 1.5 mEq/liter less than the plasma K concentration, and exponentially decrease to 2.5 mEq/liter at the end of HD. Forty-two chronic HD patients with an increase in premature ventricular complexes (PVC) during dialysis were enrolled from 18 participating centers, and randomly assigned to either sequence 1 (ABA) or sequence 2 (BAB). A pool of 333 of 378 expected ECG Holter recordings were checked for signal quality; 269 (71%) from 36 patients (86%) had a satisfactory signal quality and 108 were selected for analysis (1 per patient per period). There was a difference in the natural logarithm of the increase in PVC/hr and PVC couplets/hr during HD between treatments A and B (1.70 +/- 1.59 vs. 1.09 +/- 1.76 and 0.94 +/- 0.86 vs. 0.64 +/- 1.01, a reduction of 36% and 32%, P = 0.011 and 0.047, respectively) without any carry over effect (P = 0.61 and 0.24, respectively). The fact that this decrease of one third is due to a lower plasma-dialysate K gradient is supported by the observation that it was more evident during the first than the last two hours of HD (a reduction in the natural logarithm of the increase in PVC/hr and PVC couplets/hr of 60% and 60%, P 0.002 and 0.009, vs. 26% and 17%, P = 0.098 and 0.332, respectively): the initial plasma-dialysate K gradient was 2.3 times lower during treatment B than during treatment A, without adversely affecting pre-HD plasma K levels. These results could have a considerably clinical impact not only because of the possibility of physiologically decreasing the arrhythmogenic effect of HD, but also because this effect can be considered a "marker" of the electrophysiological derangement induced by the administration of standard HD three times a week for years ("electric disequilibrium syndrome").
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                Book Chapter
                2014
                January 11 2014
                : 27-72
                10.1007/978-3-642-41208-0_2
                745f8698-a2d6-41a3-94d6-52d0b83df319
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