In 1975 I read an article in the 'New York Times' which proclaimed that there would soon be available a backpack-sized, portable dialysis machine to make the lives of renal patients easier, but we all know how far that has come in more than 30 years!
Once, when I asked my nephrologist in 2000 about the characteristics of the dialysis machines at the unit, he said they were exactly the same model that had first come out in 1985, since there had been no substantial progress in machine design since then.
In 2000 I went to a conference held by Baxter about the future of dialysis and their great hope was that in 20 years they would have dialysis machines which would achieve better clearance of toxins, though still require three treatments a week of four to five hours each.
Well I disagree about the "50" years away comment, as I was reading a article in Popular Science and it was talking about the scientists who grew that working bladder in the lab, remember that story? Here is an article about the Bladder: http://www.cnn.com/2006/HEALTH/conditions/04/03/engineered.organs/index.html The bladders are grown from the patient's OWN cells so there is NO rejection. Currently 7 people have gotten lab grown bladders. The group is currently working on a Kidney It's an exciting time, the article says the scientists say there rough estimate for when these lab-grown non rejecting kidneys will be mainstream is 2016 which is just 10 years away.Granted a bladder is a very simple organ and a kidney is much more complex however it is a start and a step in right direction. So I don't know where you got that 50 years away idea. Mark my words within 20 years people will not die on a waiting list, there will always be dialysis but we wont need donors for transplants.
Quote from: Epoman on September 02, 2006, 12:39:06 PMWell I disagree about the "50" years away comment, as I was reading a article in Popular Science and it was talking about the scientists who grew that working bladder in the lab, remember that story? Here is an article about the Bladder: http://www.cnn.com/2006/HEALTH/conditions/04/03/engineered.organs/index.html The bladders are grown from the patient's OWN cells so there is NO rejection. Currently 7 people have gotten lab grown bladders. The group is currently working on a Kidney It's an exciting time, the article says the scientists say there rough estimate for when these lab-grown non rejecting kidneys will be mainstream is 2016 which is just 10 years away.Granted a bladder is a very simple organ and a kidney is much more complex however it is a start and a step in right direction. So I don't know where you got that 50 years away idea. Mark my words within 20 years people will not die on a waiting list, there will always be dialysis but we wont need donors for transplants.Once again Epoman, you know your stuff!
Two decades sounds like a long time. Why don't you just say a quarter of a century!
This is a Cobe Sentry 3 dialysis machine -- these were new in the early 1990s.I believe the Fresenius 2008K dialysis machines came out in the late 1990s.Let's not fool ourselves. These machines (along with better filters in the 1990s) brought with them very significant progress. No question about it.
Dialysis City and Transplant (or whatever it is called) had an article about nanite technology. Maybe Angie could post us a link or article. How about it Angie?
http://www.technologyreview.com/read_article.aspx?id=17493&ch=biotech
Quote from: Epoman on September 17, 2006, 10:46:05 PMhttp://www.technologyreview.com/read_article.aspx?id=17493&ch=biotechFrom the article:The implant would be tucked under the skin; small fluid bags worn externally could receive the ultrafiltrate and supply replacement electrolytes. A more sophisticated form of PD. No thank you.
Nanotechnology could offer an alternative, according to nephrologist William Fissell at the University of Michigan. He and colleagues are working on nano-pore membranes that could enable dialysis to be miniaturized into implantable devices that provide round-the-clock clearance of toxins, untethering dialysis patients from bulky pumps and clinics. "This is a fundamentally liberating technology," says Fissell.
solved half of the challenge: engineering nano-membranes that are efficient enough to support a compact, low-power implant. The team secured a patent for the concept earlier this year. However, engineering pores with the required selectivity--pores that drain away the worst toxins without robbing the body of critical proteins such as albumin, blood clotting factors, and antibodies--is proving to be tougher than expected.
Current prototypes contain roughly 10,000 pores per square millimeter, according to Fissell. Next-generation membranes, now being engineered, will have more than 100,000 pores or slits per square millimeter and provide more than 10 times the flow. An implanted device carrying several hundred square centimeters of this next-generation membrane should, Fissell estimates, filter at least 30 milliliters of blood per minute at average blood pressures--about one-third of normal kidney function. The implant would be tucked under the skin; small fluid bags worn externally could receive the ultrafiltrate and supply replacement electrolytes.
In an implantable version of the bio-artificial kidney, nano-pore membranes would protect the live kidney cells from immune cells and antibodies, which have thwarted most bio-artificial organ implants to date. The live kidney cells, in turn, would improve the function of the implant by reabsorbing and returning to the bloodstream some of the fluids and salts that pass through the nano-pore membrane. Eventually, bio-artificial implants that recover fluids and salts and divert the remaining ultrafiltrate to the bladder might even eliminate the need for external electrolyte and ultrafiltrate bags.
Fissell's 30 milliliters per minute of filtration would provide more than 30 percent of normal kidney function--a huge improvement, according to William Harmon, director of nephrology at Children's Hospital in Boston. It's an "important threshold," he says, above which many symptoms of kidney disease would fade: "If you're at 30 percent you're doing quite well."