Never ran out of dialysate on the old cycler but sometimes do on the new "S" cycler. Thought it may have something to do with the Flow Fraction setting (hence, the reason for my thread about Flow Fraction changes) but maybe not... By the way, for those who may not know it, the new "S" cycler can be used (if needed/wanted) for higher rates/volumes but we still use the lower rates/volumes, which is ok with the Neph and it's also ok with NxStage so long as we use the right 400 series SAK's (bags are not to be used at the higher rates/volumes on the S cycler). My husband is getting just as good of labs with the new cycler as he was with the older version, so everything is ok there. For the most part, all is going well. The only thing the Neph had him change was the Flow Fraction. Went from a 40 to a 44. We use a chart dated from 2008 titled "NxStage (SAMPLE) Setting the Ultrafiltration Rate" to calculate what UF rate to use according to how much fluid my husband needs to remove and length of treatment time (almost always 3:30 hour treatments). Seems more often than not tho, that the dialysate meets it's volume goal before the UF goal is met. I have been making my own chart to figure out what Dialysate and UF rates work best together, meaning to "zero out" at the same time or as close together as possible but all this guesswork sort of takes the fun out of treatment (ha ha, joke and a bad one at that!). Aside from calling NxStage, have any of you had this problem and what did you do to resolve it? Was it a matter of a System Setting? The Flow Fraction setting? Bad luck? A loose nut behind the wheel? I will probably be giving NxStage a call but don't think they have a new chart to go with the new "S" cycler (our nurse said they don't) but if they do, I wouldn't be surprised it's for higher rates/volumes and well, that's not going to help our situation. Thanks in advance for all who can give their input on this.
You could simply go back to 40%FF and have your old numbers you were comfortable with. Or, increase the UF slightly by about 10% since you increased the FF by 10%. If everything else is the same, you should get back to a regular session as before.
Quote from: PrimeTimer on December 20, 2014, 06:34:11 PMNever ran out of dialysate on the old cycler but sometimes do on the new "S" cycler. Thought it may have something to do with the Flow Fraction setting (hence, the reason for my thread about Flow Fraction changes) but maybe not... By the way, for those who may not know it, the new "S" cycler can be used (if needed/wanted) for higher rates/volumes but we still use the lower rates/volumes, which is ok with the Neph and it's also ok with NxStage so long as we use the right 400 series SAK's (bags are not to be used at the higher rates/volumes on the S cycler). My husband is getting just as good of labs with the new cycler as he was with the older version, so everything is ok there. For the most part, all is going well. The only thing the Neph had him change was the Flow Fraction. Went from a 40 to a 44. We use a chart dated from 2008 titled "NxStage (SAMPLE) Setting the Ultrafiltration Rate" to calculate what UF rate to use according to how much fluid my husband needs to remove and length of treatment time (almost always 3:30 hour treatments). Seems more often than not tho, that the dialysate meets it's volume goal before the UF goal is met. I have been making my own chart to figure out what Dialysate and UF rates work best together, meaning to "zero out" at the same time or as close together as possible but all this guesswork sort of takes the fun out of treatment (ha ha, joke and a bad one at that!). Aside from calling NxStage, have any of you had this problem and what did you do to resolve it? Was it a matter of a System Setting? The Flow Fraction setting? Bad luck? A loose nut behind the wheel? I will probably be giving NxStage a call but don't think they have a new chart to go with the new "S" cycler (our nurse said they don't) but if they do, I wouldn't be surprised it's for higher rates/volumes and well, that's not going to help our situation. Thanks in advance for all who can give their input on this.You are making it way to difficult for yourself. Just do some simple math YOURSELF. forget the graphs and flow fraction. Just figure how much fluid you want to remove. Then figure 3.5 hours treatment . Divide the total fluid by 3.5. That gives you the liters per hour of UF. Then when you set the dialysate speed , make sure when it gives the total time it reads slightly over 3.5 hours. that gives you a few extra minutes to play with. I run ours for 3:35 to give me 5 extra minutes to play with. If I remember right the dialysate speed runs about 8.1. I ignore the flow fraction completely. I run the blood at 330 to 340.