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      High-volume peritoneal dialysis in acute kidney injury: indications and limitations.

      Clinical journal of the American Society of Nephrology : CJASN
      Acute Kidney Injury, blood, etiology, mortality, physiopathology, therapy, Age Factors, Aged, Biological Markers, Blood Urea Nitrogen, Brazil, Chi-Square Distribution, Creatinine, Critical Illness, Female, Humans, Logistic Models, Male, Middle Aged, Multivariate Analysis, Odds Ratio, Peritoneal Dialysis, adverse effects, methods, Prospective Studies, Risk Assessment, Risk Factors, Sepsis, complications, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, Urination, Water-Electrolyte Balance

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          Abstract

          Peritoneal dialysis is still used for AKI in developing countries despite concerns about its limitations. The objective of this study was to explore the role of high-volume peritoneal dialysis in AKI patients in relation to metabolic and fluid control, outcome, and risk factors associated with death. A prospective study was performed on 204 AKI patients who were assigned to high-volume peritoneal dialysis (prescribed Kt/V=0.60/session) by flexible catheter and cycler; 150 patients (80.2%) were included in the final analysis. Mean age was 63.8±15.8 years, 70% of patients were in the intensive care unit, and sepsis was the main etiology of AKI (54.7%). BUN and creatinine levels stabilized after four sessions at around 50 and 4 mg/dl, respectively. Fluid removal and nitrogen balance increased progressively and stabilized around 1200 ml and -1 g/d after four sessions, respectively. Weekly delivered Kt/V was 3.5±0.68. Regarding AKI outcome, 23% of patients presented renal function recovery, 6.6% of patients remained on dialysis after 30 days, and 57.3% of patients died. Age and sepsis were identified as risk factors for death. In urine output, increase of 1 g in nitrogen balance and increase of 500 ml in ultrafiltration after three sessions were identified as protective factors. High-volume peritoneal dialysis is effective for a selected AKI patient group, allowing adequate metabolic and fluid control. Age, sepsis, and urine output as well as nitrogen balance and ultrafiltration after three high-volume peritoneal dialysis sessions were associated significantly with death.

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