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Chap 9'

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Title: Chap 9'


1
Chap 9. Artificial Kidney Devices
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Haemodialysis
  • The most common method of treating end stage
    renal failure
  • introduction in the 1960s
  • Improved composition of the dialyser and
    dialysate, but little change in the main design
  • Still complicated and expensive method of
    treatment
  • Introduction of continuous ambulatory peritoneal
    dialysis (CAPD) in 1975
  • With or without hemodialysis
  • Increased at a steady rate
  • cheaper, easier and less demanding therapy
  • a number of factors to consider

5
Ideal Artificial Kidney
  • Efficient removing waste products
  • Water
  • Small priming volume
  • Small resistance to flow
  • inexpensive, easy to use
  • Reliability, safety
  • Low cost
  • Nontoxic, blood-compatible

6
Haemodialysis
7
Haemodialysis
  • approximately 3 sessions/week with sessions
    lasting 4-5 hours (depending on the patient)
  • dialysed at home but usually in a hospital or
    satellite patient care centre
  • Heparin to reduce the amount of blood clotting
  • the principle of osmosis
  • uses a large surface area to transfer waste
    products and fluid as fast as possible.
  • Between dialysis, a strict diet with a reduced
    fluid intake
  • requires access to the vascular system and thus
    there is a risk of infection.
  • The access point must be periodically changed. 

8
Peritoneal Dialysis
  • A tube-like catheter is inserted to fill the
    abdomen with dialysis solution.
  • The peritoneum is used to transport waste and
    fluid.
  • usually takes 30-40 minutes
  • The dwell time (time when the fluid is in the
    abdominal cavity) usually takes 4-6 hours with 4
    exchanges per day (depending on the patient.)
  • Continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis most
    common and does not require the assistance of a
    machine.
  • Assisted peritoneal dialysis using a machine
    (cycler) to fill and drain the abdominal cavity
    (usually while sleeping)
  • may use a combination of the two methods
    depending on the patient
  • The dwell time is dependant on the patients
    ability to transport fluids and waste over time.

9
  • Peritoneal dialysis a freer lifestyle than
    haemodialysis but can be problematic if the
    patient skips treatments.
  • The dialysate can be changed by the patient
    almost anywhere
  • Infection the biggest problem due to bacteria
    which can cause peritonitis.
  • In a basic setup the main equipment is the
    transfer set and the dialysate.
  • Dialysate bags are usually heated to body
    temperature before being used with most cyclers
    having a built in heating unit.

10
  • Haemodialysis a high clearance rate over a
    short period of time
  • Peritoneal dialysis a low clearance but is
    continuous
  • more effective removal of urea with peritoneal
    dialysis
  • Peritoneal dialysis generally for younger
    patients
  • Both methods have similar problems in terms of
    the patients overall health.
  • Anaemia due to the lack of red blood cells.
  • Renal osteodystrophy affects 90 of dialysis
    patients and causes a patients bones to become
    brittle and malformed.
  • Sleep disorders as well as deposits of proteins
    on joints and tendons causing pain

11
TYPES OF DIALYZERS
  • to provide controllable transfer of solutes and
    water across a semi permeable membrane separating
    flowing blood and dialysate streams.
  • The transfer processes are diffusion (dialysis)
    and convection (ultrafiltration).
  • Three basic dialyzer designs
  • coil
  • parallel plate
  • hollow fiber

12
Coil dialyzer
  • The blood compartment consisted of one or two
    long membrane tubes placed between support
    screens and then tightly wound around a plastic
    core.
  • Non-uniform dialysate flow distribution across
    the membrane.

13
Parallel Plate Dialyzer
  • Sheets of membrane are mounted on plastic support
    screens, and then stacked in multiple layers
    ranging from 2 to 20 or more.
  • multiple parallel blood and dialysate flow
    channels with a lower flow resistance
  • The physical size of the parallel plate dialyzers
    has been greatly reduced since their
    introduction.
  • There have been major improvements
  • thinner blood and dialysate channels with
    uniform dimensions,
  • minimal masking or blocking of membranes on the
    support,
  • minimal stretching or deformation of membranes
    across the supports

14
Hollow Fiber Dialyzer
  • most effective design for providing low-volume
    high efficiency devices with low resistance to
    flow.
  • fiber bundle
  • The fibers are potted in polyurethane at each end
    of the fiber bundle in the tube sheet, which
    serves as the membrane support.

Ultra filtration
  • All excess fluid must be removed from the
    bloodstream as the patient's blood flows through
    the dialyzer.
  • The process of water removal from the bloodstream
    is called ultra filtration, and the amount of
    fluid removed is the ultra filtrate.

15
Thomas Graham Origins of dialysis
  • Thomas Graham, Professor of Chemistry at
    Anderson's University in Glasgow, coined the term
    dialysis in 1861.
  • Extraction of urea from urine

The introduction of haemodialysis
  • In 1913, Abel, Rowntree, Turner and colleague
    constructed the first artificial kidney.
  • Never used to treat a patient.
  • George Haas from Germany performed the first
    successful human dialysis in 1924.
  • lasted for 15 minutes, and no complications
    occurred.

16
WJ Kolff and H Berk
  • developed the first practical human haemodialysis
    machine was developed by from the Netherlands in
    1943.
  • This rotating drum artificial kidney consisted of
    30-40 metres of cellophane tubing in a stationary
    100-litre tank.

One of Kolff's first artificial kidneys (1946)
17
Alwall dialyser
  • The dialysis tubing was wound around the
    vertically mounted screen.
  • Dialysate circulated round this at variable
    pressure.

The Kolff-Brigham dialyser (1950)
An Alwall dialyser in the 1950s.
a modified version of the original rotating drum
kidney
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  • In 1946 Nils Alwall produced the first dialyser
    with controllable ultra-filtration.
  • 10-11 metres of cellophane tubing wrapped around
    a stationary, vertical drum made of a metal screen

the Kolff-Brigham kidney
  • successfully used to treat renal failure in a few
    centres in the early 1950s, and in the Korean war.

Modified Kolff twin coil kidney (Royal Infirmary
of Edinburgh)
  • In 1956 Kolff and Watschinger developed the "twin
    coil" artificial kidney, a modification of the
    "pressure cooker" dialyser developed by Inouye
    and Engelberg in 1952.

19
Dialysis using a domestic washing machine
Nose and colleagues in Japan (1961)
Kolff at the Cleveland Clinic, USA (1965)
20
Peritoneal Dialysis
  • Tenckhoff described home peritoneal dialysis
    using the repeated puncture technique.
  • 20-22h (60l) of dialysis under local anaesthetic.
  • Tenckhoff and colleagues later developed a soft
    tunnelled catheter, making peritoneal dialysis
    viable.

The beginnings of renal transplantation
  • In 1933, the first recorded human cadaveric
    transplant took place in Russia.
  • The first human kidney transplant from an
    allograft in 1936, by U Voronoy.
  • the 1st successful kidney transplant between
    identical twins in 1954
  • The first successful kidney transplant using an
    organ taken from a cadaver was in 1962 (Haeger K,
    1989), made possible by the development of the
    first effective drug to prevent rejection,
    azathioprine.

21
Dialysis Passive diffusion through a membrane
Objective  Understanding the kidney as a part
of the excretory system Understanding the mass
transfer process Illustrating an artificial
organ Getting acquainted with techniques for
chemical concentration measurement
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Kidney
  • the most important organs of the excretory
    system.
  • clean from the blood substances not needed in the
    body.
  • a complex filter, where active and passive
    mechanisms are involved as well as several
    complex control mechanisms

23
The Artificial Kidney
  • two major functions solute and water removal.
  • the semi-permeable membrane.
  • If blood is in contact with the membrane and
    dialysate is on the other side, solutes will be
    removed from the blood and pass to the dialysate
    side.
  • a counter current system
  • The average concentration difference across the
    membrane is larger.

24
  • As blood is pushed through the blood compartment
    in one direction, suction or vacuum pressure
    pulls the dialysate through the dialysate
    compartment in a countercurrent, or opposite
    direction.
  • These opposing pressures drain excess fluids out
    of the bloodstream and into the dialysate, a
    process called ultrafiltration.
  • Diffusion moves waste products in the blood
    across the membrane into the dialysate
    compartment.
  • Electrolytes and other chemicals in the dialysate
    solution can cross the membrane into the blood
    compartment.

25
Blood Components
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Hemodialysis System
  • Pumps
  • heaters
  • temperature controls
  • pressure and flow meters
  • bubble detectors to avoid blood cell destruction
  • etc

27
Hollow Fiber Dialyzers
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Hemodialysis Systems
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Hemodialysis Systems
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Embedded Pentium 586 ??
Embedded Pentium 586? Serial ?? ??
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Specification of Flow Unit
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Fluid Unit
Heat Exchanger, Adjustable Regulator, Air Removal
System, Concentrate Supply System, Equalizer
System, Ultrafiltration System etc
37
Concentrate Supply System
Acetate ??
Bicarbonate ??
????? ?? ??? ??
38
Air Removal System ???
  • ??? ? ?? ??
  • Dialyzer? ??, ??? ??, Flow Rate? ???, ??? ??
  • Mixing Chamber A
  • Degassing Pump
  • Mixing Chamber B
  • ???? ??? ? ??? ??? ??? ????, ????? ?? Degassing
    Chamber ? ???? ??? Chamber ??? Air Valve? close

39
Flow Equalizer system
  • Dialyzer? ???? ?? ???? ?? ??? ?? ???? ?? ???
    ????? ??? ??
  • 2-Way ?? ??? ??
  • Valve1, Valve4 open
  • ? Valve5, Valve8 open,
  • Valve2, Valve3 open
  • ? Valve6, Valve7 open

40
Ultrafiltration system
  • Pre Equalizer? ?? ???? Dialyzer? ??? ? Post
    Equalizer? ???? ?? ??? UF Pump? ??
  • Pre Equalizer? ??? ????
  • ???? ??? Monitoring
  • Post Equalizer? ??? ???? Post Equalizer? ???
    Monitoring

41
Blood Unit
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Blood Pump System
  • Peristalic Pump? ??? ??, ??? ??? ???? ??? ?? ??

AV Chamber Level Adjustment System
  • ??? ??? ???? Chamber ?? ?? ??? ?? ??
  • ?? ??? Blood Line? Saline? ?????, Chamber? ??? ??

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Touch Screen
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?????? Main Server System
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GUI(Graphics User Interface)
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??? ?????
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Modeling of film-type dialyzer
Assume, same partition coefficient
At Steady state (no accumulation of solute in any
region), the same fluxes through both films and
through the membrane
Assuming
(1) linear concentration profiles (2) Zero bulk
flow (3) No electrical potential gradients (4)
Constant diffusivity
48
The overall concentration difference
or
Thus,
or
K Overall mass transfer coeff.
49
Expressions for the Overall Mass Transfer Rate
The mass transfer
integrating
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Total mass transferred in the dialyzer
Thus,
51
Analogy with Heat Transfer
Hot fluid
2
1
cold fluid
Hot fluid
2
1
cold fluid
52
log mean temperature difference (LMTD)
53
Expressions for Dialysance, Clearance, and
Extraction Ratio
  • Dialysance D
  • performance of the dialyzer
  • (Total mass transfer) / (unit conc difference)
  • Clearance C
  • Equivalent amount of inlet blood (eg. ml/min) to
    clear all solute at the that mass transfer rate

54
Expressions for Dialysance, Clearance, and
Extraction Ratio
  • Extraction ratio E
  • Amount of solute concentration change for
    complete equilibrium with large amount of
    dialysate with conc CDi

If
  • As membrane area and the amount of dialysate used
    is increased, E approaches 1.

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For a cocurrent dialyzer,
56
or
where
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For a countercurrent dialyzer,
or
where
Fig. 9.8, 9.9, 9.10
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Modeling of the Patient-Artificial Kidney Systems
For high dialysate flow rates,
irrespective of dialyzer types
0 (fresh dialysate with no solute)
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Modeling of the Patient-Artificial Kidney Systems
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Prediction of Required Treatment Time
For a flat plate dialyzer
  • When first connected to the patient, BUN(blood
    urea nitrogen) is 150 mg, what will be BUN in
    the blood returning to the patient
  • What is clearance value for urea?

Removes urea at a rate equivalent to completely
cleaning 113cc/min of blood
61
Prediction of Required Treatment Time
For a flat plate dialyzer
  • To complete the patients BUN 50 mg, how long
    will it take, neglecting urea production in the
    body during dialysis?

62
Mass Transfer and Clearance
In the dialysis process, water and solutes are
removed.
Overall Mass Transfer
Overall Mass Transfer is the fractional depletion
of a given solute in the blood as it passes
through the dialyzer. Assuming no water
filtration, the mass transfer rate under steady
state conditions is where CBi, CBo, CDi and
CDo (mol/ml) are blood input, blood output,
dialysate input and dialysate output
concentrations respectively.
QBo and QDo (ml/min) are the blood and dialysate
output flow rates, respectively.
63
Solute Removal
Solute Removal for the artificial kidney can be
characterized by the clearance C (ml/min).
Again, assuming no water filtration, clearance
is defined as the mass transfer rate divided by
the initial concentration difference This can
be written two ways Clearance is a function
of blood flow. It varies only between 0 and the
blood flow. We therefore define extraction
fraction as the normalized clearance with respect
to blood flow
64
Filtration
  • Water is removed from the blood by
    ultrafiltration.
  • Clinically, the blood is usually subject to
    higher pressure than the dialysate resulting in
    ultrafiltration.
  • Ultrafiltration can be enhanced by increasing the
    resistance to blood flow at the dialyzer output,
    subjecting the dialysate to negative pressure or
    using membranes that are more permeable to water.
  • Ultrafiltration (ml/min) (blood inflow)
    (blood outflow), corresponding to the water
    removed from the patient per minute When
    there is ultrafiltration, clearance can now be
    written as
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