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Measuring total body water in peritoneal dialysis patients using an ethanol dilution technique.
NV. Dahl, EF. Foote, T. Kapoian, CA. Steward, RA. Sherman
Kidney Int. 1999 Dec;56(6):2297-303.
PubMed: 10594809
Abstract
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 +3.0 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 urine collection, using V as determined from TBW estimates 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 difference 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.
Associated compounds:
Compound Name
with link to compound page |
Structure | Number of references |
---|---|---|
Urea | 1130 |