Measuring total body water in peritoneal dialysis patients using an ethanol dilution technique
Measuring total body water in peritoneal dialysis patients using an ethanol dilution technique. The accuracy with which total body water (TBW) is estimated is a direct determinant of the reliability of Kt/V urea measurements in peritoneal dialysis (PD) patients. Ethanol dilution has been previously...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Kidney international 1999-12, Vol.56 (6), p.2297-2303 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Measuring total body water in peritoneal dialysis patients using an ethanol dilution technique.
The accuracy with which total body water (TBW) is estimated is a direct determinant of the reliability of Kt/V urea measurements in peritoneal dialysis (PD) patients. Ethanol dilution has been previously shown to be a reliable measure of TBW. Advances in breath alcohol technology make this a feasible clinical tool.
We gave 19 fasting chronic PD patients 0.3 g/kg of ethanol (EtOH) orally on two separate occasions. Breath alcohol concentrations (BrACs), determined by dual-beam infrared analysis, were recorded at baseline and periodically thereafter until BrACs were less than 0.01%. The TBW was then determined by standard pharmacokinetic techniques.
TBW measurements were reproducible, with a mean between-run difference of -0.004 liter/kg (95% limits of agreement -0.040 to 0.032 by Bland-Altman). The Watson equations tended to underestimate TBW, with a mean difference EtOH-Watson) of +30. liters (SD 4.0 liters, P = 0.004) and a mean absolute difference of 4.1 liters (SD 2.7 liters, range -4.4 to 9.5 liters). Kt/V was calculated from dialysate and urline collection, using V as determined from TBW estimated from EtOH and Watson. The mean Kt/V(EtOH) was 2.31 (SD 0.50) compared with 2.46 (SD 0.52) using Watson. The mean absolute differences between the two Kt/V estimates was 0.26 (SD 0.20, range -0.87 to 0.57), with Kt/V overestimated by Watson in 14 patients. EtOH was well tolerated, and the procedure was completed in about four hours.
Measuring V by the BRAc technique does not require blood sampling, is reliable, and is reproducible. It is a potentially useful method for a periodic determination of volume that may allow for more accurate Kt/V measurement in PD patients. |
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ISSN: | 0085-2538 1523-1755 |
DOI: | 10.1038/sj.ki.4491173 |