QuoteThere is no advantage at all to others who are on lower volumes and need the speed at a slower rate to get enough time on machine.Dr. Agar talks about the "waterfall effect" which in simple terms means more time on machine gets better clearance of the middle molecules. Going too fast with shorter times loses this effect. Time is critical , not speed. Take the example of a patient who is getting nice long times. Does increasing the speed, without decreasing the time, offer any benefit to the patient?
There is no advantage at all to others who are on lower volumes and need the speed at a slower rate to get enough time on machine.Dr. Agar talks about the "waterfall effect" which in simple terms means more time on machine gets better clearance of the middle molecules. Going too fast with shorter times loses this effect. Time is critical , not speed.
Try it and see how you feel with gentler dialysis. AS in my previous post yopu may find you feel better on slower gentler dialysis.
That wont work on Nxstage. The whole point of the system is a set amount of volume . So with the same volume always if you increase the speed of the dialysate will automaticlly reduce the time. There is no way around that.
Quote from: obsidianom on January 17, 2014, 06:55:25 AMTry it and see how you feel with gentler dialysis. AS in my previous post yopu may find you feel better on slower gentler dialysis.I am pushing to get overnight which will give the benefits of long/slow no matter what the machine. The problem about "see if I feel better" is that I already feel great. Dialysis (6 months PD; one year hemo) has been a mega inconvenience, however, I have been feeling better than I ever expected to based on the storied I had heard from patients. And no, I don't have any residual left propping me up.
QuoteThat wont work on Nxstage. The whole point of the system is a set amount of volume . So with the same volume always if you increase the speed of the dialysate will automaticlly reduce the time. There is no way around that. I have failed to properly formulate my question.Assume I am prescribed X liters and run for 4 hours at 200ml/hour. Now, assume I have an 18L machine at my disposal. Is there any benefit to asking my doc to prescribe 1.5x liters at 300ml/hour to get more clearance in the same treatment time?
Overnight is definatly a better way to go if you can manage it. It is longer and slower. I hope you can pull it off.
When you do go to nocturnal , rmember to slow down your blood flow to save your fistula. In Japan and Australia they run about 225 to 250 . Its gentler on the whole body and can save your heart and access.
I admire the tireless work that John Agar dies for kidney patients. However he mentions trade offs, and how patients need to consider portability against more clinical outcomes. At the end of the day though, he is an outsider looking him. He clearly understands and empathizes with patients more than the majority of nephrologists, but he is not living with the reality itself and we have to consider the reality of trade offs. The fact is that as patients we have to balance not only physical trade-offs but also the psychological aspects too. Having a huge machine that prevents travel is anathema to me. I have a thirteen year old son and have been on dialysis for most of his life, and all of his life for the time he remembers. To deny him the opportunity to enjoy simple pleasures of childhood is just not worth sacrificing. Maybe I have a fatalistic attitude, but I have been dealing with this for more than twenty years. I should have even dead twenty us years ago. I have had twenty plus years of bonus days. I know that it is unlikely that I will have a normal lifespan. I am at peace with that. In the meantime, I will continue to do the best I can for both my physical and psychological well -being. When a better portable option comes along, I will definitely be interested. Until then I will stick with my NxStage, together with its shortcomings, but also the benefits that I personally desire.
NxStage is indeed a reliable and easy to use machine. It is also the choice of machines I went with back in June of 2009 understanding also the limitations of their low flow capabilities.They have also set a new "low flow" standard that now accepted by the LDO's will be VERY hard to overcome as they now have the upgraded machine. When Baxter and FMC with the PAK get into the market which will happen one of these days, who knows when, I was told by the ex-CEO of FMC that it would be FDA approved by January of last year. I won't hold my breath in getting the full 60 liter machine in a 4 hour session any time soon if ever. It sets up a choice for me when the Baxter and FMC PAK come on line of dumping NxStage. They will have to try and compete with this standard flow machines which are now called "High Dose." The marketing of the Baxter machine tells the story that NxStage has reset the dialysate flow curve standard and not to our benefit.In that, the nephrologist of America are pretty uniform of their disapproval of NxStage. We are simply caught in a market where it is big, hard to manage, huge RO system and expensive plumbing and electrical work with the Baby K, or the simple to use NxStage that allows NxStage to expand the market. I have been relatively silent about the deficiencies of NxStage in the last 5 years because it was the only real game in town. That is no longer true. However, I did set out the principles of what I needed NxStage to do back in my post in 2010. The volume is simple too low.Interestingly, I had a conversation with Dennis Deneau, one of the inventors of the NxStage System One and a Vice President of the company, at the 2011 ADC in Phoenix where I spoke at the Saturday Home Dialysis Symposium. I bluntly told Dennis, give me a machine that can do 60 liters in 4 hours and I will be happy with NxStage. Their ultra-pure dialysate remains their biggest competitive factor. He told me, I don't believe we can do that, but you will be happy with our new machine coming out. I can't take credit for the new 60 liter capability, but I am sure I am not the only person that they had that request. For me to feel well, I need three days in a row of NxStage before I take my break. Two sessions leaves me a bit down as far as how I feel. That is on 40 liters. Their clearances are simply too low. For 4 hours of dialysis, I get a Kt/V of only 0.8 at best. That is a poor use of 4 hours as far as solute removal. If I can get above 1.0 in a single session, then I have taken NxStage to the max. Will I ever see that with the LDO's having studies such as the FREEDOM study showing them that 20 liters in 3 hours is all you need? I won't hold my breath.As far as what your clearances are with short or long dialysis sessions, as I referred to you earlier in two pm's, using 30 liters of dialysate over 3 hours or 8 hours, the clearance will be exactly the same. Brent Miller of Washington Medical School in St Louis discussed that at the 2011 ADC as well.
Basic math. Same x volume at faster speed means shorter time on machine. You may get slightly quicker clearance but lose time which causes loss of the gain so it evens out .
QuoteBasic math. Same x volume at faster speed means shorter time on machine. You may get slightly quicker clearance but lose time which causes loss of the gain so it evens out .We are still speaking on different wavelengths Assume that my doctor prescribes a higher volume of dialysate since a higher flow rate allows me to use 1.5X liters of flow instead of X liters in a single treatment. Consider a non-nocturnal treatment, and that with the 12L machine, my doc were to prescribe a volume that runs 4 hours at a 200ml flow rate. Assume further that nocturnal is not possible, and that neither my doc or I consider a 6 hour treatment reasonable. Would I see an improvement with 1.5X the dialysate, running at 300ml, over the same time? We are NOT talking constant volume.By the way - thanks to all who have replied, particularly hemodoc and obsidianom - this has been a fantastically informative thread.
So by going up 50% in dailysate , you only gain about 15 % clearance. Not that much benefit really.
The high flow machine really is for larger people who need 60 liter treatments and dont want to go 5 hours
Quote from: Simon Dog on January 18, 2014, 08:05:41 PMQuoteBasic math. Same x volume at faster speed means shorter time on machine. You may get slightly quicker clearance but lose time which causes loss of the gain so it evens out .We are still speaking on different wavelengths Assume that my doctor prescribes a higher volume of dialysate since a higher flow rate allows me to use 1.5X liters of flow instead of X liters in a single treatment. Consider a non-nocturnal treatment, and that with the 12L machine, my doc were to prescribe a volume that runs 4 hours at a 200ml flow rate. Assume further that nocturnal is not possible, and that neither my doc or I consider a 6 hour treatment reasonable. Would I see an improvement with 1.5X the dialysate, running at 300ml, over the same time? We are NOT talking constant volume.By the way - thanks to all who have replied, particularly hemodoc and obsidianom - this has been a fantastically informative thread.The short answer is yes, the higher you take NxStage on clearances, the better your solute clearance for you the patient. I first wrote about the NxStage clearances and WHY the standard NxStage dosage was not a correct philosophy back in January of 2009, a few months before I started on my own NxStage treatments in June of 2009.http://www.billpeckham.com/from_the_sharp_end_of_the/2009/01/nxstage-dialysate-flow-rates.htmlIf you look at the pop out of the slide showing the dialysate flow graph, you will see visually that for every increase in dialysate flow rates along the entire curve, there is a corresponding improvement of clearances. I looked at the issue once again in a year later talking about taking the NxStage System One to the max.http://www.billpeckham.com/from_the_sharp_end_of_the/2010/02/taking-nxstage-system-one-to-the-max.htmlIf you look at the graph in this post by Dr. John Daugirdas, you will see how single pool Kt/V measurements are correlated with frequency and the resultant weekly Kt/V. The goal of several devices known and some not known yet are to bring the weekly Kt/V to the 7-8 levels approximating 40 ml/min of renal function. One reason to set this level is that in children, if you don't get them to the 40 ml/min level, they won't grow. That is the level that Victor Gura is looking at with his latest version of the WAK. The prototype achieved 25 ml/min clearances.So stating that a Kt/V of 3.0 is good doesn't give the whole story of where the innovative devices, many of which no one outside of the cloistered researchers have ever seen, and the direction that these researchers are heading and why they have this level of clearance as their goal. If that is what research states is the direction we should head, why wait 2, 3, 5 or 10 years until the FDA approves these devices in development today. If I can achieve a weekly Kt/V of 4-5 by taking NxStage to the max, why wouldn't I do that now with the technology available right now?If we don't push the LDO's to raise the limits, we will be stuck in the mortality and morbidity that has given America a black eye when it comes to dialysis issues. There is a truth in dialysis that holds true in almost all situations that more is better when it comes to improved solute clearances and increasing TIME and frequency on dialysis.So, the short answer is yes, it will improve your clearances and the long answer following explains in part why.
QuoteSo by going up 50% in dailysate , you only gain about 15 % clearance. Not that much benefit really. Excellent - this was the sort of answer I was looking for. But, I don't see why I shouldn't go for the 15% gain if I am ambe to negotiate for the bigger system Quote The high flow machine really is for larger people who need 60 liter treatments and dont want to go 5 hours What is the weight cutoff for "larger"?
You could easily run 50 liters on the slower system at 12 liters per hour for 4 hours, 10 minutes.