Dialysis is surprisingly difficult to find information 
about. In the emergency department, I think we're only 
interested in:
 - how do we not look stupid when a renal patient comes 
in
 - which patients do we need to arrange urgent dialysis 
for
 - what do we do differently with a sick patient on 
dialysis
Overview
There are two main types of "routine" dialysis. In ICU it 
is different, and their dialysis is normally continuous, 
and there are many different types.
- Haemodialysis
Fine fibre tubes mimic the body's glomeruli, and filter 
the blood. Semi permiable. Waste products carried away. 
You need hydrostatic pressure to be able to increase.
- Peritoneal dialysis
Dialysis fluid introduced into the adbdominal cavity. 
Waste transfers through the peritoneal membrane into the 
fluid. Abdomen then drained. Could be continuous 
ambulatory peritoneal dialysis - which doesn't need a 
machine, or continuous cycler-assisted peritoneal 
dialysis.
Urgent Dialysis
I think the most common cause of urgent dialysis from the 
ED is hyperkalaemia, and potentially drug overdose. 
Dialysis might also be indicated for pulmonary oedema.
Not all drugs are dialysed out successfully.
Sick Dialysis Patient
- Speak to their renal unit
- Check electrolytes
- Fluid overload normally needs dialysis, as diuretics 
need functioning kidneys
- Infection is a leading cause of death - always send 
cultures. Pyrexia is often related to gram positive 
sepsis.
- Anticoagulation - renal failure often leads to a 
bleeding tendency. Ask which anticoagulants have been 
used.
- Dialysis related hypotension is the most frequent 
symptomatic complication. It is caused by reflex 
withdrawal of sympathetic tone resulting from reduced 
left ventricular filling. This normally happens because 
the patient's fluid balance is suboptimal.
- Cramps are common and might be due to volume depletion 
and tissue hypoxia. Hypertonic fluid, like 50mls of 50% 
dextrose often raises plasma osmolality and helps.
- The most serious acute events during dialysis include 
air embolism, line disconnection leading to haemorrhage, 
acute haemolysis or toxicity related to line kinking or 
dialysis contamination, and acute allergic reactions to 
dialysers or sterilants (ethylene oxide).
Lines
Don't touch the fistula. When cannulating use veins as 
distal as possible, to try and preserve the bigger access.
Bleeding fistula are often caused by infection. They need 
compression, possibly topical tranexamic acid, and urgent 
vascular referral.
References
http://ccforum.com/content/pdf/cc10280.pdf
http://lifeinthefastlane.com/tag/dialysis/
https://www.emrap.org/episode/2013/april/thehypotensive
http://www.emlitofnote.com/2011/12/risks-of-missing-dialysis.html
http://academiclifeinem.com/mythbuster-urgent-dialysis-following-iv-contrast/
http://www.kidneydialysis.org.uk/hemodialysis.htm
http://www.kidneyatlas.org/book5/adk5-01.ccc.QXD.pdf
http://www.edrep.org/pages/textbook/haemodialysis.php
http://openmed.co.uk/curriculum/renal/
http://www.frca.co.uk/article.aspx?articleid=100367
http://www.frca.co.uk/Documents/194%20Renal%20replacement%20therapy%20in%20critical%20care.pdf
http://www.learnicu.org/Presentations/RRT%20in%20ICU.ppt
http://www.ccmtutorials.com/renal/rrt/index.htm


