AI Article Synopsis

  • Intradialytic blood pressure (BP) is primarily used to monitor patients during hemodialysis (HD), but knowing details about cardiac output and resistance could offer better insights.
  • A study employed a non-invasive bio-impedance system to assess multiple hemodynamic parameters in chronic HD patients, examining changes before, during, and after dialysis across various hemodynamic profiles.
  • The findings indicated that most patients did not remain hemodynamically stable during dialysis, with higher mortality rates observed in those with low cardiac power and total peripheral resistance, suggesting that enhanced monitoring could improve patient safety during HD treatments.

Article Abstract

Background: Intradialytic blood pressure (BP) measurement is currently the main parameter used for monitoring hemodynamics during hemodialysis (HD). Since BP is dependent on cardiac output and total peripheral resistance, knowledge of these parameters throughout the HD treatment would potentially be valuable.

Methods: The use of a novel non-invasive monitoring system for profiling hemodynamic response patterns during HD was explored: a whole-body bio-impedance system was used to assess cardiac index (CI), total peripheral resistance index (TPRI), cardiac power index (CPI) among other parameters in chronic HD patients from 4 medical centers. Measurements were made pre, during and post dialysis. Patients were grouped into 5 hemodynamic profiles based on their main hemodynamic response during dialysis i.e. high TPRI; high CPI; low CPI; low TPRI and those with normal hemodynamics. Comparisons were made between the groups for baseline characteristics and 1-year mortality.

Results: In 144 patients with mean age of 67.3 ± 12.1 years pre-dialysis hemodynamic measurements were within normal limits in 35.4% but only 6.9% overall remained hemodynamically stable during dialysis. Intradialytic BP decreased in 65 (45.1%) in whom, low CPI (47 (72.3%)) and low TPRI (18 (27.7%) were recorded. At 1-year follow-up, mortality rates were highest in patients with low CPI (23.4%) and low TPRI (22.2%).

Conclusions: Non-invasive assessment of patients' response to HD provides relevant hemodynamic information that exceeds that provided by currently used BP measurements. Use of these online analyses could potentially improve the safety and performance standards of dialysis by guiding appropriate interventions, particularly in responding to hypertension and hypotension.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6724365PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12882-019-1542-4DOI Listing

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