ObjectiveTo investigate the status of exit-site care in patients undergoing peritoneal dialysis, and analyze the relationship between exit-site care practice and exit-site infection.MethodsThe patients undergoing peritoneal dialysis in Nanfang Hospital, Southern Medical University between January and October 2019 were recruited by convenience sampling method. The Exit-site Schaefer Scale was used to diagnose the occurrence of exit-site infection. According to the guidelines of the International Society of Peritoneal Dialysis and relevant research, a questionnaire was developed to investigate the status of exit-site care in all peritoneal dialysis patients. Logistic regression analysis was used to analyze the influence of care practice on exit-site infection.ResultsA total of 208 peritoneal dialysis patients were recruited. There were 39 patients with (totally 43 times of) exit-site infections, with an exit-site infection incidence of 0.06 episodes per patient-year. The main bacteria were Staphylococcus aureus (30.2%) and Pseudomonas aeruginosa (16.3%). Of the 39 infected patients, 8 (20.5%) had peritonitis and 3 (7.7%) had been infected more than once. The exit-site Schaefer score of the 208 patients was 3.14±2.75. Of the 208 patients, 204 (98.1%) had received training of exit-site care from nurses, 166 (79.8%) could wash their hands and wear masks as required, 196 (94.2%) covered dressings on the exit site, and 184 (88.5%) fixed catheters, but the application of antibiotic ointment did not follow the latest guidelines. The logistic regression analysis revealed that the history of redness and swelling at the exit site [odds ratio (OR)=7.926, 95% confidence interval (CI) (2.367, 26.535), P=0.001] and the history of traction-associated bleeding [OR=5.750, 95%CI (1.878, 17.610), P=0.002] were risk factors of exit-site infection.ConclusionsExit-site infection is common in peritonealdialysis patients. Most patients can perform the exit-site care as required, but the care content is yet to be updated. Nursing staff should improve the training content according to the latest guidelines, strengthen the exit-site assessment, follow-up, and retraining, treat the redness and swelling at the exit site timely, and tell the patients to pay attention to catheter fixation and avoiding excessive traction, to prevent the exit-site infection and the further development of peritonitis.
ObjectiveTo observe the changes of blood flow density and perfusion density in the macula of non-diabetic peritoneal dialysis (PD) patients, and their correlation with blood pressure, total protein, albumin, prealbumin, serum creatinine, urea, and high-sensitivity C-reactive protein were preliminarily analyzed.MethodsA single-center, cross-sectional, clinical observational study. From January to December 2018, 63 eyes of 63 non-diabetic patients (non-diabetic PD group) and 75 eyes of normal healthy people (the normal control group) who underwent PD treatment at the PD Center of Peking University First Hospital were included in the study. All were monocular into the group. Among the 63 patients in the non-diabetic PD group, 24 were males and 39 were females. The duration of PD was 7 to 185 months, with the average duration of 67.87±48.36 months. There were 75 healthy persons in the normal control group. There was no significant difference in age (t=-0.558), sex ratio (χ2=0.492), axial length (t=-1.197), and BCVA between the two groups (P>0.05). OCT angiography was used to scan the macular area of 3 mm×3 mm and 6 mm×6 mm in the subject’s right eye. The blood flow density and perfusion density of superficial retinal capillaries in the macular area, as well as the area, circumference, and morphological index of the foveal avascular zone (FAZ) were measured. The blood flow density and perfusion density at different locations in the macular area of the two groups of eyes were compared by independent sample t test. The blood pressure, total protein, albumin, prealbumin, serum creatinine, urea, and high-sensitivity C-reactive protein was performed by Pearson correlation analysis.ResultsCompared with the healthy control group, the blood flow density and perfusion density of superficial retinal capillaries in the macular area of the non-diabetic PD group decreased in different scanning ranges with the macular vessel 3×3 center (t=-2.409), the macular vessel 3×3 macular (t=-2.423), macular vessel 3×3 intact (t=-2.759), macular vessel 6×6 intact (t=-1.882), macular vessel 6×6 outer layer (t=-2.188), macular perfusion 3×3 center (t=-1.990), macular perfusion 3×3 complete (t=-2.719), macular perfusion 6×6 complete (t=-2.113), and macular perfusion 6×6 outer layer (t=-2.205). The difference was statistically significant (P<0.05). The comparison of the macular FAZ area of the two groups of eyes was statistically significant (t=1.985, P<0.05). Correlation analysis showed that 3×3 macular blood vessels were intact and mean arterial pressure was positively correlated (r=0.256, P=0.043). The macular blood vessels were 3×3 intact, macular perfusion was 3×3 intact, and macular blood was 6×6 intact, which the pre-white protein was positively correlated with (r=0.468, 0.362, 0.333; P<0.001, P=0.004, 0.008). The macular vessel 3×3 was intact, the macular perfusion 6×6 was intact, which the hypersensitive C-reactive protein was negatively correlated with (r=-0.370, -0.287, P=0.005, 0.030).ConclusionThe superficial retinal blood flow density and perfusion density in the macular area of non-diabetic PD patients are lower than those of normal healthy people.
Objective To summarize our experience of cardiovascular surgery for patients dependent on dialysis, and evaluate its safety and efficacy.?Methods?Clinical data of 10 consecutive patients dependent on maintenance dialysis underwent cardiovascular operations between Dec. 2004 and April 2011 in Peking Union Medical College Hospital were analyzed retrospectively. There were 6 male and 4 female patients, aged between 23 to 71 (57.6±13.2) years. They were put on dialysis 3-98 (25.2±30.6) months prior to operation due to diabetic nephropathy in 6 patients, chronic glomerulitis in 3 patients and systemic lupus erythemus in 1 patient, and 8 were dependent on hemodialysis and 2 on peritoneal dialysis. Five patients underwent coronary artery bypass grafting, one underwent Bentall procedure,two underwent aortic valve replacement, one underwent mitral valve replacement, and one underwent superior vena cava thrombectomy and patch repair. Patients underwent dialysis on the day before elective operation, followed by continuous ultra-filtration during cardiopulmonary bypass, and then bedside heparin-free continuous veno-venous hyperfiltration-dialysis started 5-32 hours after the operation. Conventional peritoneal dialysis or hemodialysis was resumed 4-7 days after operation.?Results?All operations were successfully completed. Cardiopulmonary bypass time was (125.8±33.5)minutes, aortic clamp time was(77.2±25.5) minutes. One in-hospital death occurred due to septic shock after deep chest wound infection. One patient underwent re-exploration due to pericardial temponade to achieve hemostasis. Three patients experienced atrial fibrillation and were all converted to sinus rhythm by amiodarone. Nine patients recovered to discharge and were followed-up for 8-76 months. Two late deaths occurred due to intracranial hemorrhage and liver carcinoma respectively. Seven survived patients were all in New York Heart Association grade II functional class, and none of them experience major advertent cardiac events related to grafts or prosthetic valve. One patient switched to hemodialysis 14 months after discharge due to peritonitis.Conclusion?Cardiovascular surgery can be practiced in patients dependent on maintenance hemodialysis or peritoneal dialysis with appropriate peri-operative management, so that symptoms can be relieved and quality of life improved.
ObjectiveTo investigate the influence of evidence-based nursing intervention on the treatment effect and quality of life in patients with peritoneal dialysis. MethodSixty-four patients who underwent peritoneal dialysis between January 2013 and December 2014 in our hospital were randomly divided into control group (n=32) and intervention group (n=32) . The control group received routine nursing and the intervention group received evidencebased nursing intervention. Urea clearance index (KT/V), serum albumin and hemoglobin levels were detected for both groups of patients before and after nursing intervention. Generic Quality of Life Inventory (GQOLI)-74 scale was used to assess patients' quality of life. ResultsAfter nursing intervention, KT/V, serum albumin and hemoglobin levels in the intervention group were significantly higher than those in the control group (P<0.05) . The scores of such items as physical function, psychological function, social function and overall evaluation in the GQOLI-74 scale in the intervention group were significantly higher than those in the control group (P<0.05) . ConclusionsEvidence-based nursing intervention can effectively improve the treatment effect and quality of life in patients with peritoneal dialysis, which is worthy of clinical popularization and application.
ObjectiveTo systematically review the pharmacoeconomics of hemodialysis and peritoneal dialysis in patients with end-stage renal disease. MethodsCRD, NICE, CADTH, HITAP, NECA, IWIQG, ISPOR, PubMed, EMbase, CNKI, and WanFang Data databases were electronically searched to collect pharmacoeconomic studies on the hemodialysis and peritoneal dialysis in the treatment of end-stage renal disease from inception to December 2020. Two reviewers independently screened literature, extracted data, and assessed the risk of bias of included studies. Then, the conclusions of research models, pharmacoeconomic evaluation results, and sensitivity analysis were summarized. ResultsA total of 15 pharmacoeconomic studies were included, among which 9 studies used the Markov state transition model, and 6 were observational studies. From the perspective of health outcomes, peritoneal dialysis had cost-effectiveness advantages over hemodialysis in the treatment of end-stage renal disease under the condition of a clear threshold. ConclusionsCurrent evidence shows that compared with hemodialysis, peritoneal dialysis has certain cost-effectiveness advantages in the treatment of end-stage renal disease. Due to limited quality and quantity of the included studies, more high-quality studies are required to verify the above conclusions.
Peritoneal dialysis (PD) represents an essential renal replacement therapy for end-stage renal disease patients. However, conventional glucose-based dialysis solutions limit the clinical adoption of PD due to complications including peritoneal fibrosis and metabolic disturbances. This review systematically elaborates on advances in novel biocompatible osmotic agents: L-carnitine improves peritoneal metabolic homeostasis, while hyperbranched polyglycerol enables sustained ultrafiltration with dual peritoneal/renal protection. These innovations delineate the future direction for osmotic agent development: integrating multifunctional properties (anti-fibrotic, pro-repair, and metabolic regulation) beyond foundational osmotic efficacy.
Objective To investigate the change of pathogenic distribution and drug resistance in peritoneal dialysis associated peritonitis (PDAP). Methods The clinical data of all the patients undergoing continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis and suffered from PDAP between January and December in 2014 was retrospectively collected, and the pathogens, drug resistance, outcomes and underlying causes were analyzed. Results A total of 64 patients had 72 cases of PDAP. Only 36 strains (50.0%) had positive culture results, among which 24 strains (66.7%) were Gram-positive bacteria strains, 7 strains (19.4%) were Gram-negative bacteria strains, and 5 strains (13.9%) were fungi. For Gram-positive bacteria strains, the resistance rates to vancomycin, linezolid and rifampicin were all 0%; the resistance rate to levofloxacin, gentamycin and cefazolin was 14.3%, 26.3% and 50.0%, respectively. For Gram-negative bacteria strains, the resistance rates to amikacin and imipenem were both 0%; the resistant rate to gentamycin, ceftazidime, levofloxacin and ampicillin was 28.6%, 28.6%, 42.9% and 100.0%, respectively. Conclusions The pathogenic spectrum and drug resistance in PDAP have been markedly changed. Selection of antibiotics should be chosen according to the characteristic of the pathogenic spectrum and drug resistance of each center. Great effort is still needed to improve the culture positive rate of the effluent dialysate and to improve the recovery rate of peritonitis.
Objective To investigate the change of cardiac structure and function in patients with uremia before and after peritoneal dialysis (PD). Methods Eighty three standard continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD) patients treated between October 2009 and October 2014 were selected in this study. According to the ultrasound cardiogram before and 6 months after the PD, we analyzed the influence of age, diabetes mellitus, dialysis interval, hemoglobin, serum albumin, serum creatinine, serum calcium and phosphate and parathyroid hormone (PTH) on the cardiac structure and function. Results Hemoglobin increased significantly after PD (P <0.01), while albumin and PTH decreased significantly (P <0.01). The changes in creatinine, triglyceride and cholesterol were not statistically significant (P > 0.05). For CAPD patients, cardiac systolic function did no t obviously change before and after dialysis, while the diastolic function improved obviously after dialysis. Conclusion PD may improve cardiac diastolic function of CAPD patients.
ObjectiveTo explore the practice effect of the combination management of tertiary hospital and community hospital for home peritoneal dialysis patients. MethodsA total of 50 patients of end-stage renal disease from December 2012 to May 2013 were involved in this study, including 26 males, and 24 females with the average age of 47.1±13.9. The patients were randomly divided into hospital group (30 patients) and combination group (20 patients). For the patients in the hospital group, the specialists take care of them with regular outpatient service and follow-up; for the patients in the combination group, they were taken care by doctors from both tertiary hospital and community hospital, while the community general practitioners were trained by the tertiary hospital regularly with peritoneal dialysis basic treatment and standardization management and communication. All the patients were managed for 9 months. ResultsAt the end of the observation,the dialysis adequacy success rate, hemoglobin, blood potassium, phosphorus, calcium, albumin, CO2CP, blood pressure success rate, the incidence of peritonitis, and average monthly medical treatment expense between the two groups were not statistically different (P>0.05); the difference in cost of transportation was statistically significant (P<0.05). ConclusionThe standardization manage of combination of tertiary hospital and community for patients with home peritoneal dialysis may reduces the patients' expense in transportation, and improve the community general practitioners' level of basic knowledge and indication of peritoneal dialysis.
Objective To assess the possible causes of acute pancreatitis (AP) in long term peritoneal dialysis (PD) and hemodialysis (HD) patients, and to discuss the diagnosis and treatment of AP in this kind of patients. Methods The clinical data of 9 cases of AP in PD and HD patients who were admitted in the hospital during January 1993 and January 2000 were analysed retrospectively. Results The serum levels of amylase of all the 9 cases were over three and a half times of upper limit value of healthy subjects. B mode ultrasound and CT scan examinations were useful for diagnosis of AP. Eight patients recovered very well with conservative treatment, while one patient who was diagnosed as acute severe pancreatitis and complicated with shock died. Conclusion Long term PD and HD patients are predisposing to develop AP. Diagnosis of AP in these patients primarily depends on the detection of serum amylase. Dialysis treatment is indispensable for cure of AP.