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Peritoneal Inflammation after Twenty-Week Exposure to Dialysis Solution: Effect of Solution versus Catheter–Foreign Body Reaction

Authors :
Jeffrey Henegar
Zhi He
Karla Richardson
Michael F. Flessner
Xiaorong Li
Kimberly Credit
Glenn Hoskins
Rebecca Potter
Source :
Peritoneal Dialysis International: Journal of the International Society for Peritoneal Dialysis. 30:284-293
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2010.

Abstract

♦ BackgroundWe hypothesized that both sterile solutions and foreign body reaction to the peritoneal dialysis catheter are associated with inflammatory changes in rats exposed to hypertonic solution.♦ MethodsFour hypertonic solutions (30 – 40 mL) were injected daily via needle and syringe over 20 weeks in 4 groups of rats: 4.25% standard clinical solution (LAC), LAC plus pyridoxamine (PYR), LAC plus ethyl pyruvate (EP), and a biocompatible 4% dextrose solution (BIC). Two groups received catheters: a non-injected 4-week catheter group (C4) and a group injected for 20 weeks with the BIC solution (CI). Control animals (CON) were not injected. In the C4 group, adherent cells were separated from the catheter and examined by culture and electron microscopy to ensure that animals were bacteria free prior to exposure to solution. Animals underwent transport experiments to determine mass transfer coefficients of mannitol (MTCM) and albumin (MTCA), osmotic filtration flux (Josm), and hydrostatic pressure-driven flux (Jp). After euthanasia, tissues were examined for submesothelial thickness, vascular density, and immunohistochemistry for various cytokines.♦ ResultsThe catheter cell layer was free of bacteria and consisted of macrophages, lymphocytes, mesothelial cells, and fibroblastic cells. Marked differences in angiogenesis and submesothelial thickening were noted for the catheter groups. Transport differences were mixed: MTCMwas significantly less for the CI group and MTCAwas variable among the groups. There were no differences among groups for Josmor Jp. Inflammatory markers in the catheter-adherent cells correlated with inflammatory changes in the tissue. These data demonstrate significant changes in submesothelial thickness, angiogenesis, transport function, and inflammatory markers between animals injected with sterile solutions over 20 weeks with and without catheters.♦ ConclusionsAn indwelling catheter amplifies peritoneal inflammation from dialysis solutions through a foreign body reaction. Our data also suggest that additives to existing solutions may have limited the effect on inflammatory response to non-biocompatible solutions.

Details

ISSN :
17184304 and 08968608
Volume :
30
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Peritoneal Dialysis International: Journal of the International Society for Peritoneal Dialysis
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d16a7817cb061ba457b057ec3a9ea90f
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3747/pdi.2009.00100