Thank you. I didn't know what ischemia was.. I just thought it weird that while reading through an explanation of something, and have to stop to look up a word in the explanation.. Also, not impressed that the doctor just told me to look it up.. then the other doctor comes along.. we have a short conversation... he says "your bp is running low today." I say, "yeah, it does every day." He says, "you're feeling okay, though? Not feeling faint or cramping?" I say, "no, I'm good." He says, "I wouldn't worry about it, then." Then he waslks away.. huh?
I wrote a few articles on this with Bill back in 2010.http://www.billpeckham.com/from_the_sharp_end_of_the/2010/03/myocardial-stunning-is-common-in-dialysis-patients.htmlSimply put, myocardial stunning, hybernation and ischemia are related conditions where the heart muscle loses adequate oxygenation and becomes dysfunctional from ischemia, or lack of blood flow. Stunning and hybernation are similar terms referring to lack of wall motion in the heart after low blood flow.Low blood pressure is multifactorial in dialysis patients. Low blood pressure is one of the causes of low blood flow to the heart. Another cause is the low potassium bath that removes potassium in the artificial kidney. When the venous blood returns to the heart, the low potassium causes the blood vessels to tighten or vasoconstrict. This also,lowers blood flow to the heart. Even with low ultrafiltration, blood flow to the heart is diminished in almost all dialysis patients, high ultrafiltration rates and low,potassium baths worsen the effect to the point many develop ischemia with slight damage to the heart that leads to,damage to,the heart muscles. Over time, this damage causes scarring which leads to dilation of the remaining heart muscle. The result is congestive heart failure which worsens fluid control. To combat poor fluid control, nephs use higher ultrafiltration rates and sodium profiling leading to worsening myocardial ischemia in a downward spiral difficult to combat.
Yes, there have been some articles on this for a few years with another one recently as well. For those of us on NxStage, being cold, cold, cold is part of the wonders of treatment. Some are now advocating setting your temp on the machine half a degree below your measured temp. This is apparently most protective of the brain during dialysis. There is much more we need to research on optimal dialysis if only they would.