Dialysis and CRRT Flashcards
dialysis
technique in which substances move from the blood through a semipermeable membrane and into a dialysis solution (dialysate)
used to correct fluid and electrolyte imbalances and to remove waste products in kidney failure
maintain fluid balance by removing excess fluid from the blood
osmosis
movement of fluid from an area of lesser concentration to an area of greater concentration of solutes
diffusion
movement of solutes from an area of greater concentration to an area of lesser concentration
ultrafiltration
water and fluid removal, mimics the ultrafiltration function of the kidneys
removes a predetermined percentage of plasma water from the blood before being returned to the body
convection
the movement of solutes out of the blood compartment along with movement of water or ultrafiltration
adsorption
binding of substances to the surface of the filter/membrane
3 methods of dialysis
peritoneal dialysis
hemodialysis
CRRT
peritoneal dialysis
uses the patient’s peritoneal membrane as the permeable membrane to removes wastes and water
dialysate infused through catheter in abdomen and “dwells” for a specific period of time and is then drained out of the patient
unable to remove precise amounts of water
potential complications of peritoneal dialysis
peritonitis
hernias
atelectasis/PNA
intermittent hemodialysis access methods
dialysis catheter (short term)
AV fistula or graft (long term)
intermittent dialysis indications
BUN >90 & Cr >9
K>/=6
drug toxicity
GFR <15 mL/min
metabolic acidosis
intermittent dialysis contraindications
hemodynamic instability
inability to coagulate
no access
AV fistulas and grafts: special considerations
assess patency of fistula with thrill and bruit
protect integrity with restricted extremitiy
infection and thrombus prevention
CRRT
gradual over 8-24hrs
uremic toxins and fluids are removed while acid-base status and electrolytes are adjusted slowly and continuously
requires dialysis catheter
CRRT indications
hemodynamic instability
fluid overload
oliguria
electrolyte disturbances: hyperkalemia and hypercalcemia
acidosis
sepsis
major burns w/ AKI
drug overdose
rhabdomyolysis
contrast induced nephropathy