Abstract
Purpose:
This study clarified the features of a hemoconcentrator-based, alternative hemodialysis (ALTHD) method that improves the speed of serum potassium (K+) concentration adjustments, compared with dilutional ultrafiltration (DUF), during cardiopulmonary bypasses.
Methods:
Standardized bovine blood was recirculated (300 ml/min) through an in vitro hemoconcentrator circuit; hematocrit, K+ and glucose levels were measured at 5–20 min after DUF or ALTHD. We evaluated DUF at dialysis speeds of 50–250 ml/min and ALTHD at speeds of 50–1000 ml/min.
Results:
ALTHD rapidly corrected K+ and glucose concentrations at speeds up to 800 ml/min. ALTHD took 8.9 min to reach a K+ level of 4.5 mmol/L, faster than DUF (12.8 min). The ALTHD efficiency curves plateaued at 600 ml/min.
Conclusion:
ALTHD allowed faster adjustment of electrolyte levels, with peak efficiency at 600 ml/min. ALTHD has possible clinical application if available for potential use during all cardiopulmonary bypass surgeries involving extracorporeal circulation.
Keywords
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
