Brain density changes during renal replacement in critically ill patients with acute renal failure - Continuous hemofiltration versus intermittent hemodialysis
C. Ronco et al., Brain density changes during renal replacement in critically ill patients with acute renal failure - Continuous hemofiltration versus intermittent hemodialysis, J NEPHROL, 12(3), 1999, pp. 173-178
Computerized tomography (CT) studies of the brain were made on 12 patients
with acute renal failure from different origin. Patients were treated for t
wo subsequent days in random sequence with intermittent hemodialysis (HD) (
one 4-h session and Kt/V greater than or equal to 1) and continuous veno-ve
nous hemofiltration (CVVH) (one 24-h session and Kt/V greater than or equal
to 1). CT scans were done before and after the HD and CVVH session in each
patient. In baseline conditions, the only macroscopic morphological altera
tion was a slight brain edema in some patients. Significant changes in the
density of white and gay matter were observed after the HD session in all p
atients (gray matter from 52.3 +/- 5.2 to 38.9 +/- 5.3 and white matter fro
m 36.7 +/- 3.5 to 24.8 +/- 3.2 Hounsfield units, average delta -26.7%). No
changes were observed after CVVH. We conclude that intermittent HD involves
a remarkable degree of "unphysiology", leading to increased water content
in the brain after each session. In acute patients this may lead to a post-
dialytic brain edematogenic state. The physiological stability provided by
continuous therapies such as CVVH avoids this unwanted effect, and suggests
that continuous renal replacement therapies should be a first choice in th
ese patients.