You have to have enough air to fill a ventricle in your heart (25 ml?) for it to kill you, otherwise it may go to your brain and make a tiny clot. If you see a little bubble go in you may not remember that day with your grandpa at the ice cream parlor when you were 4. I don't know that for sure, but air bubbles in the brain can't be good.
Quote from: Zog on September 26, 2010, 11:13:57 AMYou have to have enough air to fill a ventricle in your heart (25 ml?) for it to kill you, otherwise it may go to your brain and make a tiny clot. If you see a little bubble go in you may not remember that day with your grandpa at the ice cream parlor when you were 4. I don't know that for sure, but air bubbles in the brain can't be good.Please remember that the air is going into the venous system. Unless you have a hole between the two atria (a patent foramen ovale, or PFO) that air bubble will wind up in the microcapillary circulation of the lungs, where it will be reabsorbed without damage. It can't get from the venous (right side) of the heart to the arteries that supply the brain without passing through the lungs first. The lung circulation acts as a filter.Small amounts of air will not cause a problem.
Both ports of the catheter are in the vein. The arterial port is just named that because that port is a little higher up - the idea is you pull the blood to be cleaned from the "upstream" portion and return cleaned blood a little further "downstream". The names treat the dialyzer as an organ - artery carries blood to the organ, veins return it.Sometimes when a catheter isn't working well, the nurses will switch ports - pull blood through the venous side, return through the arterial. The cleaning might be a little worse, but it's better than not having dialysis.
just as an aside, I've been reversing my lines 7 nights/week for 3 yrs and I'm just fine.