Renal Replacement Therapy 1 (Dialysis) Flashcards
What are the symptoms of uraemia?
Malaise/exhaustion
Sleeping too much
What are the biochemical investigations of renal disorders?
FBC
ESR
U&E’s
Urinalysis
Blood & Urine culture
ABG
What are the principles of dialysis?
The solute compisition of a fluid A is altered by exposing the fluid to a second fluid B, via a semipermeable membrane
1st principle of Dialysis - Diffusion
Particles move across the semipermeable membrane in order to balance the concentration
2nd principle of Dialysis - Ultrafiltration
Particles moves across semipermeable membrane in order to balance concentration, some fluid is also removed
- Dialysis removes Creatinine and Urea
- Dialysis replaces lost particles such as Na+, Bicarbonate
What are the different modalities of dialysis and briefly explain how they work?
Haemodialysis:
- Blood pumped into filter at opposite end from dialysate so that blood has a chance to be filtered
- Once blood has been filtered by dialysate it is returned into the patients body
Peritoneal dialysis:
- Dialysis solution is put into the peritoneal cavity using the peritoneum as a dialysis membrane
- After a dwell time the fluid is drained and a fresh dialysate is instilled
- Dialysate fluid contains a balanced concentration of electrolytes (glucose most common for ultrafiltration)
How are dialysis patients managed and what are the complications of dialysis?
Fluid restriction (allowed urine output + insensible loss)
Dietary restriction (no potassium, sodium or phosphate)
Haemodialysis complications:
CVS problems (arrythmias)
Coagultation
Peritoneal dialysis complications:
Infection
Tube malfunction