west china medical publishers
Keyword
  • Title
  • Author
  • Keyword
  • Abstract
Advance search
Advance search

Search

find Keyword "Blood purification" 4 results
  • Continuous Veno-venous Hemofiltration Combined with Toxic Absorption for the Treatment of One Crush Syndrome Patient Injured in Earthquake

    In this article, the first time use of continuous veno-venous hemofiltration(CVVH) combined with toxic absorption for the treatment of a crush syndrome patient injured in earthquake is described. Correct therapeutic regimen, close observation and prescription condition are crucial for the success of management. The evidence for the application of this method is also discussed in detail.

    Release date:2016-09-07 02:13 Export PDF Favorites Scan
  • Prognosis of pregnant patients with renal failure undergoing blood purification therapy

    Objective To observe the prognosis of pregnant patients with renal failure who underwent blood purification. Methods Pregnant patients with renal failure undergoing blood purification (hemodialysis or hemofiltration) from January 2009 to February 2017 were included in this study. Clinical data and pregnancy outcome were collected retrospectively. Results A total of 42 patients were enrolled in this study, including 38 with acute renal failure, 3 with chronic progressed renal failure, and 1 with chronic renal failure. There were 5 patients (11.9%) with chronic kidney disease (CKD) before pregnancy, 3 (7.2%) with systemic lupus erythematosus, 24 (54.8%) with hypertension, 5 (11.9%) with acute pancreatitis, and 7 (14.3%) with acute liver failure. In perinatal period, 7 patients (16.7%) died, whose underlying diseases were acute pancreatitis in 2, lupus nephritis in 1, acute hepatic failure in 3, and pulmonary tuberculosis breakout in 1. There were 5 patients with twin pregnancy, and 37 patients with single pregnancy. In the 28 patients with natural pregnancy ending, the live birth rate was 82.1% (23/28), and the live birth rate of twin pregnancy was only 50% (5/10). Twenty-seven patients were followed up, in whom 10 were in end stage of renal disease (ESRD), which was correlated with hypertension (P=0.001), and 3 patients were in CKD 1–4. Renal diseases were completely recovered in 14 patients. New CKD were diagnosed in 8 patients, without any correlated factor. Conclusions For pregnant patients with renal failure undergoing hemodialysis or hemofiltration, the death risk and the dead birth rate are high. Patients with hypertension or pre-existed renal failure have higher risk for ESRD. Some patients are not completely recovered from acute renal failure, with CKD left.

    Release date:2018-07-27 09:54 Export PDF Favorites Scan
  • Nomenclature for renal replacement therapy and blood purification techniques in critically ill patients

    This article reviews Chinese nomenclature of renal replacement therapy and extracorporeal blood purification currently utilized to manage acute kidney injury and other organ dysfunction syndromes in critically ill patients, based on the recent reports of a consensus expert conference of Nomenclature Standardization Initiative Alliance. We provide a detailed description of the performance characteristics of membranes, filters, transmembrane transport of solutes and fluid, flows, and methods of measurement of delivered treatment, common definitions, components, techniques, and operations of the machines and platforms as well as the renal replacement therapy techniques in detail with the relevant technologies, procedures, operations, and recent developments in other extracorporeal therapies, including therapeutic plasma exchange, multiple organ support therapy, liver support, lung support, and blood purification in sepsis. We believe this nomenclature review will serve future use of terminology in publications, research, clinical operations and therapy platforms to enable consistent data collection and comparison.

    Release date:2018-07-27 09:54 Export PDF Favorites Scan
  • Blood purification: from renal replacement to organ support

    Patients with severe acute kidney injury (AKI) often need renal replacement therapy (RRT)with a high morbidity and mortality. For patients with chronic renal failure, the aim of blood purification is renal replacement; but for patients with AKI, although customarily called RRT, the aim of blood purification is not “renal replacement”, but extracorporeal “renal support and protection”, that is, supporting and protecting temporally failed kidney, removing damage factors, avoiding renal reinjury and looking forward to restore renal function. This article provides a detailed explanation of the differences between renal replacement and renal support from the perspective of organ protection, as well as the key links of RRT and extracorporeal multiple organ support for patients with severe AKI.

    Release date: Export PDF Favorites Scan
1 pages Previous 1 Next

Format

Content