I'm glad you have had good luck with NxStage. unfortunately I havent . In a year I am on my 6th cycler and 3rd or 4th PureFlow. I have an abysmally high failure rate on cartridges and am in the middle of a long standing air issue as we speak.I am seriously thinking about going back in center since it literally consumes my entire day dealing with either rdialysis or other related issues. I need my life back.
One thing you can do to reduce air in the pressure pod and in the whole system is to clamp the red clamp during the snap and tap or just before it while it is at "23". Clamp it for 3 or 4 seconds then open it. This pushes air out quickly and hard. If you do it 3 times it seems to really reduce air in the pod and line . Since doing this I have never had an air alarm again.
Quote from: obsidianom on February 01, 2014, 05:42:35 AMOne thing you can do to reduce air in the pressure pod and in the whole system is to clamp the red clamp during the snap and tap or just before it while it is at "23". Clamp it for 3 or 4 seconds then open it. This pushes air out quickly and hard. If you do it 3 times it seems to really reduce air in the pod and line . Since doing this I have never had an air alarm again.Dear obsidianom, I would have to wonder if that would actually increase air in the system by cavitation. I have accidently clipped the red and turned it on and then I have to spend several minutes getting rid of the air created by doing that especially while I am doing my rinse.I have found that setting the machine up, then going and doing my supplies and take a shower, in that time, the micro-bubbles aggregate into larger macro-bubbles that I can easily snap and tap. I then draw my heparin and pick my scabs and then when every thing is ready, I do a final snap and tap. Well actually a series of snap and taps and I tap the pressure pod itself.The other thing I do is to snap and tap the white line after I hook up the white to white. If you do this, there is very little air bubbles left when you do your rinseback.
Yeah that all would work. I use 1 inch needles and blood flow rate is 450. At 350 I'd be on for 6 hours. I have 30 litres of dialysate and an ff of 40. Andto add to an answer to another question you asked me, I am 6'T3'' and my dry weight is 120.5 KG. Using bags is not that inconvenient to me... like a mini workout.