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Appropriateness and clinical outcomes of short sustained low-efficiency dialysis: A national experience

Authors :
Rahhal Alaa
Najim Mostafa
Mahfouz Ahmed
Habib Mhd Baraa
Hassen Sara Seife
Al-Shekh Isra’a
Ahmed Ashraf Omer
Toba Haneen
Abbarh Shahem
El Hassan Mawahib
Al Yafei Sumaya
Badr Amr
Mahmoud Khaled Mohamed
Source :
Open Medicine, Vol 18, Iss 1, Pp 8-8 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
De Gruyter, 2023.

Abstract

Sustained low-efficiency dialysis (SLED) is usually performed over 6–12 h among hemodynamically unstable patients. Conduction of 4-h SLED may spare time and manpower during hospitalization. Therefore, we conducted a retrospective observational study to explore the appropriateness and clinical outcomes of 4-h SLED among critically ill patients admitted to our center from 1/06/2016 to 1/06/2020. Renal parameters including blood urea nitrogen, serum creatinine, sodium, phosphorus, potassium, and bicarbonate were determined on the day of dialysis before SLED and within 24 h after SLED, and clinical outcomes including, acute kidney injury (AKI) recovery, in-hospital mortality, 30-day mortality, 180-day mortality, and re-admission with AKI, were evaluated. Of the 304 patients included, 69.4% were male. The majority of patients were from the Middle East (65.8%), followed by 28.6% from Asia. Four-hour SLED resulted in a significant improvement in the renal parameters. Recovery from AKI was observed in 25.4%, in-hospital mortality rate was 48.7%, while the 30- and 180-day mortality outcomes were 3.2 and 9.6%, respectively, and re-admission with AKI was observed in 16.9%. Our findings suggest that 4-h SLED significantly improved renal parameters and was associated with favorable clinical outcomes in terms of survival and AKI recovery, suggesting possible utilization of SLED shorter than 6 h in the acute settings to preserve time and manpower for procedures.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23915463
Volume :
18
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Open Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.981fb7a9e37a4008a12f230ece3889e7
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1515/med-2023-0868