Abstract
Peritoneal dialysis is becoming more and more common as a method of treating patients at the final stage of renal failure. In the year 2002 the number of patients treated with this method in Poland amounted to 1324. Studies have demonstrated that inguinal and abdominal hernias develop more frequently in chronic renal failure patients. The percentage of patients with hernia diagnosed within the first five years of dialysis is about 10%. Continuation of dialysis with the hernia condition left untreated may result in severe complications which are the third most frequent cause of converting treatment method into hemodialysis in PD patients. Currently in Poland there is no national standard in existence as to the management of hernias, and the only British standard from 1998 does not reflect the present expertise of either surgical treatment or dialysis methods. The aim of the current questionnaire based study investigating Polish peritoneal dialysis centers was to assess the treatment when hernia had been diagnosed in the PD patient. Of 49 dialysis centers in Poland, 39 do have protocols on managing the patient before and after the operation. A considerable diversity has been found as to surgical techniques used and the ways the patients are managed in hospital. Following the need expressed by 33 dialysis centers in Poland for some standard for relevant procedures, the authors formulated principles of modern hernia treatment in PD patients. Accordingly, the main principles include: 1) consulting a surgeon collaborating with the center before qualifying for peritoneal dialysis and when hernia symptoms have manifested; 2) Tension-free methods used in a treatment of choice (recommended by PHS); 3) Application of antibiotic prophylaxis (preferably first generation cephalosporin); 4) Induction of local or epidural anesthesia; 5) Peritoneal dialysis programme does not need to be discontinued but low volume dwells or preferably intermittent APD is recommended immediately after surgery.
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