Less Dialysis-Induced Morbidity and Vascular Instability with Bicarbonate in Dialysate

Abstract
Three protocols were devised to test the postulate that increased morbidity during high-efficiency dialysis with large-surface-area units (LS) might be due in part to the increased flux of bicarbonate out and acetate into the patient inherent in LS dialysis. The 1st protocol showed that with LS-acetate dialysis there was a marked fall in plasma bicarbonate and PCO2 [carbon dioxide partial pressure] during the first 3-4 h, followed by a rapid rise in bicarbonate above normal and return to control in PCO2. With LS-bicarbonate dialysis, these oscillations were largely eliminated. A 2nd double-blind protocol showed that CNS-type symptoms noted during and after LS-acetate dialysis were reduced significantly by switching to LS-bicarbonate dialysis. The 3rd protocol showed that with LS-bicarbonate the tolerable rate of ultrafiltration could be increased 67% compared with LS-acetate dialysis.

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