Sorry I screwd this up and reposted it. I am interested in your take on this Hemodoc. I know you think Nxstage uses too little dialysate. Does this make you at least a little less concerned?
Thank you, thats helpful. I did mention the sodium load to my contact in the company and tomorrow I have a pre arranged phone call with one of their top product guys. I intend to bring that up along with lowering the calcium as an option too.
Quote from: obsidianom on April 20, 2014, 12:16:09 PMThank you, thats helpful. I did mention the sodium load to my contact in the company and tomorrow I have a pre arranged phone call with one of their top product guys. I intend to bring that up along with lowering the calcium as an option too.They won't lower the calcium which seems a priori to be the correct thing to do, but in fact, Brent Miller MD has shown with extended dialysis such as daily nocturnal, you must have a Ca level of 2.5-3.0 in the dialysate to prevent calciphylaxis. It seems the Ca level is where is should be. The sodium level is another issue.
Yes, and when this was tried with nocturnal dialysis, i.e., extended dialysis protocols, the rate of calciphylaxis increased. When they went to 3.0 on the ca in dialysate, the calciphylaxis reversed. You may wish to contact Dr. Brent Miller at Washington University in Saint Louis for his writings on this issue.
Quote from: Hemodoc on April 20, 2014, 01:27:51 PMYes, and when this was tried with nocturnal dialysis, i.e., extended dialysis protocols, the rate of calciphylaxis increased. When they went to 3.0 on the ca in dialysate, the calciphylaxis reversed. You may wish to contact Dr. Brent Miller at Washington University in Saint Louis for his writings on this issue.Why do you think this occurs? It seems counter- intuitive that lowering the calcium slightly would cause calciphalaxis. Do you have any theories?
I read several articles on this including the ones you sent and it appears actually there are multiple opinions and in general low calcium in the dialysate is only an issue with nocturnal dialysis due to the long time on the machine . They really made a case for individualizing the calcium to the patient. In my wifes case she would benefit from 2.75 calcium rather than the 3.0 currently in the bath as she runs on the high side. I didnt really see any mention of calciphalaxis. I did talk to our nephrologist about sodium levels in the bath just out of interest. They run 140 in center here. He thought 140 made sense with Nxstage.Why do you think it should be lower ? Would that work for everyone or just a few patients ?
What is interesting is her calcium runs 10.2 and her phosphorus runs low to low normal without any binders. Her PTH was just checked and is normal at 56 . Her alkaline phosphatase runs very slightly up at 104. Basically all normal with just high normal calcium.