AUTOMATED PERITONEAL-DIALYSIS FOR HOME USE
- 1 January 1978
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 47 (187) , 261-280
Abstract
To provide an alternative to maintenance home dialysis for patients remotely situated or who had vascular access failure, a parallel peritoneal dialysis (PD) program was developed. Patients (36) started PD with the intention of carrying out home treatments. Thirty of the 36 succeeded and 22 completed at least 6 mo. of home treatments, 7 have so far been treated for over 1 yr. No neuropathy developed except in diabetic patients. No patient, including 4 who had undergone bilateral nephrectomy, was dependent on blood transfusions. Predialysis serum creatinine values were questionably higher (P < 0.07) in a group of 6 patients who at another time had been maintained on hemodialysis (HD). In this group serum albumin was (mean .+-. 1 SD) 3.3 .+-. 4 g/100 ml on PD and 3.8 g/100 ml on HD (P < 0.05). Of the 36 patients, 16 had bacterial peritonitis on 22 occasions; the average incidence was once every 14 mo. of patient exposure. An epidemic of sterile peritonitis involving 40 episodes in 16 patients was resolved after machine techniques were changed. Catheter failure occurred in 15 of the 22 patients in the long-term group, but catheter replacement was not difficult.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Epidemic of Aseptic Peritonitis Caused by Endotoxin during Chronic Peritoneal DialysisNew England Journal of Medicine, 1977
- PERITONEAL DIALYSIS IN CHRONIC RENAL FAILURE1968
- PROTEIN LOSSES DURING PERITONEAL DIALYSISThe Lancet Healthy Longevity, 1967