1. Dose of dialysis based on body surface area is markedly less in younger children than in older adolescents.
- Author
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Daugirdas JT, Hanna MG, Becker-Cohen R, and Langman CB
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Age Factors, Anthropometry, Blood Urea Nitrogen, Chicago, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Infant, Israel, Kidney Failure, Chronic blood, Kidney Failure, Chronic physiopathology, Male, Time Factors, Body Surface Area, Kidney Failure, Chronic therapy, Models, Biological, Renal Dialysis, Urea blood
- Abstract
Unlabelled: BACKGROUND AND OBSERVATIONS: The current denominator for dosing dialysis is the urea distribution volume (V). Normalizing Kt/V to body surface area (S) has been proposed, but the implications of doing this in children have not been examined., Design, Setting, Participants, & Measurements: Dialysis dose given to children and adolescents was calculated in terms of conventional V-based scaling and surface-area-normalized standard Kt/V (SAN-stdKt/V) calculated as stdKt/V x (Vant/S)/17.5, where Vant was an anthropometric estimate of V calculated using the Morgenstern equation. Formal 2-pool modeling was used to compute all dialysis adequacy outputs., Results: In 34 children (11 girls, 23 boys) dialyzed 3 times a week, age range 1.4 to 18 years, the mean delivered equilibrated Kt/V (eKt/V) was 1.40, and the mean stdKt/V was 2.49, both of which tended to be higher in younger children. The ratio of Vant to S was 15.6 +/- 2.69 and was strongly associated with age between ages 2 and 16. SAN-stdKt/V averaged 2.21 and was strongly correlated with age between ages 2 and 16. If one considers a desired target for SAN-stdKt/V to be 2.45, all children less than 10 years of age were below target, despite having relatively high values of eKt/V and stdKt/V., Conclusions: If a surface-area-based denominator were to be adopted for dialysis dosing, most children under 10 years of age would receive markedly less dialysis than adolescent patients and would require 6- to 8-hour hemodialysis sessions or, for the youngest children, treatments given more frequently than 3 times/wk.
- Published
- 2010
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