B. Canaud et al., SLOW ISOLATED ULTRAFILTRATION FOR THE TREATMENT OF CONGESTIVE-HEART-FAILURE, American journal of kidney diseases, 28(5), 1996, pp. 67-73
Slow isolated ultrafiltration (UF) was used to remove excess water and
sodium in refractory congestive heart failure (CHF) patients. Fifty-t
wo patients (40 men, 12 women; age, 63.8 +/- 10.2 years) presenting wi
th CHF (class IV, New York Heart Association (NYHA)) were included in
the study. Forty-one patients had normal renal function, and 11 patien
ts had various degrees of renal failure before the episode of cardiac
decompensation. Cardiac disease caused by ischemia, hypertension, or a
combination was present in the majority of patients (n = 28). UF was
performed in all cases via a venovenous modality using a double-pump m
odule (blood and UF pumps) and using highly permeable membrane (AN69;
Hospal, Lyon, France). The weight loss achieved by UF to restore dry w
eight was 9.2 +/- 5.0 kg over 9.0 +/- 10.5 days with satisfactory hemo
dynamic tolerances. Outcome of the 52 patients was as follows: 13 pati
ents (nonresponders) died during the course of treatment; 24 patients
(responders) had both cardiac and renal temporary improvement for a sh
ort or long duration period; 15 patients (partial responders) had card
iac improvement and renal degradation leading to long-term treatment (
intermittent UF or dialysis). Interestingly, diuresis returned in 24 o
f 39 responder patients. In conclusion, isolated UF offers a simple an
d effective means of escape from the cardio-renal vicious circle in re
fractory CHF patients. UF must be considered as an integral tool for t
he modern treatment of CHF. (C) 1996 by the National Kidney Foundation
, Inc.