American journal of kidney diseases : the official journal of the National Kidney Foundation
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Treatment of Severe Intradialytic Hypotension With the Addition of High Dialysate Calcium Concentration to Midodrine and/or Cool Dialysate.
Treatment of intradialytic hypotension (IDH) in the end-stage renal disease population has been a difficult task for nephrologists caring for these patients. The presence of multiple pathogenic factors contributes to hemodynamic instability and explains why therapies that modulate only a specific aspect of the problem are only partially effective. Cool dialysate (34.5 degrees C to 35.5 degrees C) and midodrine may provide hemodynamic stability through an increase in peripheral vascular resistance, whereas high dialysate calcium concentration (HDCa; 3.5 mEq/L) improves intradialytic blood pressure through preservation of cardiac output. ⋯ Thus, it appears that the addition of HDCa to midodrine and/or cool dialysate further improves blood pressure in patients with IDH. However, this therapy did not reduce symptoms or interventions required for IDH. In addition, hypercalcemia complicated this therapy in 22% of the patients.