Background: Acute Kidney Injury (AKI) has a significant mortality rate. In developing countries, mortality due to AKI is high due to lack of access to dialysis facilities and related cost. The main goal of International Society of Nephrology (ISN) 0 by 25 initiative is to eliminate deaths due to AKI. Peritoneal dialysis is an underutilized modality in such a scenario. The aim of this study was to look into effectiveness of starting Acute stylet Peritoneal Dialysis (PD) in a resource constraint settings.
Methods: In this prospective study conducted over a year, patients with AKI due to various aetiologies were subjected to Acute stylet PD. The clinical Outcome, demographic, biochemical and treatment data was assessed. Descriptive statistics was used to analyze the data.
Results: A total of 79 (41 anuric, 33 oliguric and 5 nonoliguric) patients were included in the study. Sepsis was the predominant cause of AKI. Recovery was seen in 34% of patients. Patients with relatively preserved urine output recovered with PD in comparison to the anuric patients (p value <0.01). 58% of patients, majority of whom were anuric needed Hemodialysis (HD) in due course (7 ± 3 days) of time. The mortality in our study was 7.5%.
Conclusions: Acute stylet PD can be considered as a modality of Renal Replacement Therapy (RRT) to treat a selected (oliguric, nonoliguric) group of AKI patients and as a bridge therapy for HD in those AKI patients in anuria.
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