What Is Dialysis
Dialysis Nurse Dialysis Jobs
Nutritian
Resource
Links |
Dialysis Treatment
- Dialysis is conducted in a dedicated facility, either a special room
in a hosipital or clinic that specializes in hemodialysis dialysis.
- Nurses and technicians working in the facility have special training
specific to dialysis.
- A dialysis patient will be given a prescription by a nephrologist (a
doctor specializing in kidney issues. All dialysis treatement issues are
ultimately referred back to this doctor or alternate, though the
attending nurse will often make minor care decisions without referring
to the doctor.
- The dialysis prescription will specify various parameters for
setting up dialysis machines. It will also specify times and durations
of dialysis sessions. In the US, 3-4 hour sessions, 3 times a week are
typical.
- The dialysis center to be used by the patient is contacted and
schedules the patient for a specific time period.
- Before or around the time the patient arrives for his/her scheduled
session, a dialysis machine will be prepared. There are many models of
dialysis machines, but typically in modern machines there will be a
computer, CRT, a pump, and facility for disposable tubing and filters.
The filters (the actual artificial kidneys) are cylindrical, clear
plastic outside with the filter materiel visible inside (looks like
thick paper). They are perhaps 15-18" long, and 2-3" thick. They have
connectors at both ends. The technician or nurse will setup plumbing on
the machine in a moderately complex pattern that has been worked out to
move blood through the filter, allow for saline drip (or not), allow for
various other medications/chemicals to be administered. How the plumbing
is setup may vary between models of machine and they types of filters.
For some filters, it is necessary to clear sterlizing fluid (Renaline,
or others) from the filter before connecting the patient. This done by
altering the plumbing to push saline through the filter, and carefully
checked with a type of litmus test. The pump does not directly contact
the blood or fluid in the plumbing - it works by applying pressure to
the tubing, then moving that pressure point around. Think of a disk with
a protrusion in it. Put this into a close fitting 270 degree enclosure.
Put plastic tubing between the enclosure and the disk, entering and
exiting in the 90 open degrees. Now imagine the disk turning. It will
put pressure on the tubing, and the pressure point will roll around
through the 270 degrees, forcing the fluid to move. It is characteristic
of dialysis machines that most of the blood out of the patients body at
any given time is visible. This facilitates troubleshooting,
particularly detection of clotting.
- The patient arrives and is carefully weighed. Standing and sitting
blood pressures are taken. Temperature is taken.
- Access is setup. For patients with a fistula (a surgical
modification to an arm or leg vein to make it more robust, and therefore
usable for high capacity blood movement required by dialysis) this means
inserting to large gauge needles into the fistula. (Yes, it hurts.)
Fistulas are widely considered the desirable way to get access for
hemo-dialysis, but they take time to setup and mature. For other
patients, access may be via a catheter installed to connect to large
veins in the chest. (This means no needles, but there are other severe
downsides to a catheter). There are some other arrangements that can be
made as well.
- When access has been setup, the patient is then connected to the
preconfigured plumbing - creating a complete loop through the pump and
filter. The pump and a timer are started. Hemodialysis is underway.
- As a practical matter, fluid is also removed during dialysis. Most
dialysis patients are on moderate to severe fluid restrictive diets (in
addition to other dietary restrictions). This is because kidney failure
usually includes an inability to properly regulate fluid levels in the
body. A session of hemodialysis may typically remove 2-5 kilograms (5-10
pounds) of fluid from the patient. The removal of fluid done to achieve
a predetermine "dry weight" of the patient. This is a weight that the
care staff believes represents what the patient should weigh without
fluid built up because of kidney failure. Removing this much fluid can
cause or exacerbate low blood pressure. Monitoring is intended to detect
this before it becomes too severe. Low blood pressure can cause
cramping, naseua, shakes, dizzyness, lightheadedness, and
unconsciousness.
- At the end of the prescribed time, the patient is disconnected from
the plumbing (which is removed and discarded, except perhaps for the
filter, which may be sterilized and reused with the same patient at a
later date). Needle wounds (in case of fistula) are bandaged with gauze,
held for 5-10 minutes with direct pressure to stop bleeding, then the
taped in place. It's just like getting blood draw, only it takes a lot
longer, and more fluid is lost.
- Temperature, standing and sitting blood pressure, and weight are all
measured again. Temperature changes may indicate infection. BP discussed
in point 10 above. Weighing is to confirm the removal of the desired
amount of fluid.
- Care staff verifies that the patient is in condition suitable for
leaving. The patient must be able to stand (if previously able),
maintain a reasonable blood pressure, and be conherent (if normally
coherent). Different rules apply for in-patient treatment - in those
cases the patient isn't leaving the facility.
The previous article was found at the web site Wikopedia
Top
|