Does you machine not alarm as soon as air bubbles are detected? I had that happen to me the other week and it alarmed micro bubbles detected, straight away they stop the machine and (dont ask me how) but with the use of a syringe can draw off the blood from a chamber which results in rectifying the problem. Failing that dialysis would be stopped straight away the machine stripped and a fresh machine brought out primed and ready to go. As you say its approx 250-300mls of blood which isnt really that much to lose, all things considered !
Here its usually no more than 3-4 minutes before they dump everything in such events.Standard procedure is too clear the needle lines at all times when someone is disconnected from the machine.... for anything.Here for those that do not use heparin they run a little heparin through the tubing and filter in the beginning before hookup. During they run they flush the system with saline to try to keep it clear. Usually adds .2 each time to the person goal for each time they do it.
Quote from: BigSky on October 29, 2010, 04:29:08 PMHere its usually no more than 3-4 minutes before they dump everything in such events.Standard procedure is too clear the needle lines at all times when someone is disconnected from the machine.... for anything.Here for those that do not use heparin they run a little heparin through the tubing and filter in the beginning before hookup. During they run they flush the system with saline to try to keep it clear. Usually adds .2 each time to the person goal for each time they do it.Would you mind if I forwarded your post to the head nurse at our center? It sounds like the standard procedures at your center are better for handling this eventuality than the procedure at my center--which seems to be "Try any damn thing you can think of and just keep trying it until you stumble on something that works".
I have been known to clot the dialyzer and lines. The staff where I am works a short time to fix it,then will initiate a new set-up for the machine.