scholarly journals Using Bioimpedance Spectroscopy to Assess Volume Status in Dialysis Patients

2019 ◽  
Vol 49 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 178-184 ◽  
Author(s):  
Frank M. van der Sande ◽  
Esther R. van de Wal-Visscher ◽  
Stefano Stuard ◽  
Ulrich Moissl ◽  
Jeroen P. Kooman

The aim of the paper is to reflect on the current status of bioimpedance spectroscopy (BIS) in fluid management in dialysis patients. BIS identifies fluid overload (FO) as a virtual (overhydration) compartment, which is calculated from the difference between the measured extracellular volume and the predicted values based on a fixed hydration of lean and adipose tissue mass. FO is highly prevalent in both hemodialysis (HD) and peritoneal dialysis (PD) patients, while levels of FO are at a population level comparable between PD patients and HD patients when measured before the dialysis treatment. Even mild levels of FO are independently related to outcome in patients on HD, PD as well as in nondialysis patients with advanced chronic kidney disease. FO is not only related to left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) but also forms part of a multidimensional spectrum with noncardiovascular risk factors such as malnutrition and inflammation. Even after multiple adjustments, FO remains an independent predictor of mortality. BIS-assisted adjustment of dry weight in HD patients has been shown to improve hypertension control and LVH and has resulted in a decline in intradialytic symptomatology. On the other hand, with increased fluid removal, target weight may not always be reached due to an increase in intradialytic symptomatology, and care should be applied in target weight adjustment in fluid overloaded patients with severe malnutrition and/or inflammation. Although a reduction in hospitalization rate was suggested, the effect of BIS-guided dry weight adjustment on mortality has not yet been shown, however, although available studies are underpowered. In PD patients, results have been more equivocal, which may be partly related to differences in treatment protocols or study populations. Future large-scale studies are needed to assess the full potential of BIS.

2015 ◽  
Vol 39 (1-3) ◽  
pp. 32-36 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elizabeth L. Oei ◽  
Stanley L. Fan

Background: Fluid status is an independent predictor of mortality in dialysis patients. Current methods of fluid assessment have several limitations. Summary: An ideal method should be cheap, portable, easy to perform without extensive training, reproducible and determines patients' excess or deficit of total body water. Bioimpedance analysis (BIA) fulfils many of these criteria and can give additional information on fat and lean tissue composition. The accuracy and precision of BIA has been shown to be equivalent to the ‘gold standard' direct estimation techniques. Key Messages: Although there remains some concern about its validity in dialysis patients, fluid overload determined by BIA has been shown to predict mortality. BIA-guided fluid management appears superior to conventional fluid management in achieving clinically important outcomes such as reduction in blood pressure, left ventricular mass index, and arterial stiffness. Accurate setting of dry weight might also help preserve residual renal function by limiting episodes of dehydration. Nevertheless, as with all new technologies, there are issues that still need to be resolved. This will be achieved only with larger prospective interventional studies to explore its specific roles in dialysis cohorts.


2012 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 29-34 ◽  
Author(s):  
Huan-Sheng Chen ◽  
Kuan-Chang Lee ◽  
Chun-Ting Cheng ◽  
Chun-Cheng Hou ◽  
Hung-Hsiang Liou ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yu Ah Hong ◽  
Hye Eun Yoon ◽  
Bum Soon Choi ◽  
Seok Joon Shin ◽  
Yong-Soo Kim ◽  
...  

AbstractAdequate fluid management plays an important role in decreasing cardiovascular risk in peritoneal dialysis (PD) patients. We evaluated whether strict volume control monitored by bioimpedance spectroscopy (BIS) affects cardiac function in PD patients. This study is a secondary analysis of a multicentre, prospective, randomized, controlled trial. Fluid overload was assessed by the average overhydration/extracellular water (OH/ECW) at baseline, 6 months and 12 months. Patients were categorized as time-averaged overhydrated (TA-OH/ECW ≥15%) or normohydrated (TA-OH/ECW <15%), and echocardiographic parameters were compared between groups. Among a total of 151 patients, 120 patients exhibited time-averaged normohydration. Time-averaged overhydrated patients had a significantly higher left atrial (LA) diameter and E/e′ ratio and a lower left ventricular (LV) ejection fraction at 12 months than time-averaged normohydrated patients. LA diameter, end-systolic volume and end-diastolic volume were decreased at 12 months compared to baseline in time-averaged normohydrated patients only. TA-OH/ECW was independently associated with ejection fraction at 12 months (β = −0.190; p = 0.010). TA-OH/ECW, but not OH/ECW at 12 months, was an independent risk factor for LV dysfunction (odds ratio 4.020 [95% confidence interval 1.285–12.573]). Overhydration status based on repeated BIS measurements is an independent predictor of LV systolic function in PD patients.


2020 ◽  
Vol 35 (Supplement_3) ◽  
Author(s):  
JOnas Öhman

Abstract Background and Aims Intradialytic hypotension is a fairly common and serious adverse phenomenon. Associated comorbidities include e.g. heart failure, hypovolemia, allergic reactions with the dialysis apparatus and electrolyte disturbancies. Excessive ultrafiltration may explain later onset hypotension, but early-onset hemodynamic collapse remains poorly understood. Preventive interventions may include incremental dialysis, increasing dry weight, increasing dialysis time and changing dialysis membranes/apparatus. This study combines Echocardiography (Echo) and Lung Ultrasound (LUS) for hemodynamic phenotyping of patients with severe, early onset intra-dialytic hypotension. The aim is to figure out possible preventive strategies depending on underlying abnormalities. Method We enrolled dialysis patients with a symptomatic decrease in systolic arterial pressure &lt; 90 mmHg requiring norepinephrine during the first 60 minutes of at least two consecutive dialysis sessions in our dialysis department. Echo + LUS was done simultaneously to everyone at baseline, i.e. BEFORE dialysis begun, and later at onset of a hypotension episode during dialysis. Patients with active bleeding or any other obvious temporary etiology for hypotension were excluded. Echo concentrated especially on volemic state and filling pressures, while LUS evaluated the lungs and pleurae for signs of pulmonary congestion. Cardiac structure and function (e.g. valves, ejection fraction) was also evaluated. Results Between 1.10.2019 - 31.12.2019 10 patients were enrolled. All patients eventually required norepinephrine despite fluid challenge. No patients had signs or symptoms of an allergic reaction, such as urticaria or stridor/obstructive respiration, nor significant electrolyte disturbancies. 5/10 patients had severe systolic cardiac dysfunction at baseline (LVEF &lt; 30 %) and these 5 patients also simultaneously showed signs of congestion and fluid overload on ultrasound. On the contrary, the other 5/10 patients without severe cardiac failure all had low left-sided filling pressures and a collapsed inferior vena cava on Echo ALREADY at baseline, i.e. before initiation of dialysis. All of these hypovolemic patients had an excellent residual diuresis (&gt; 1500ml/d). All 10 patients in this study showed a significant drop in body volume measurement (BVM) -curves and left-sided filling pressures on Echo prior to onset of hypotension. Of the 5 patients with severe cardiac dysfunction, 2/5 were transmitted into palliative care without dialysis, while 3/5 could be managed without future norepinephrine by longer, more frequent dialysis sessions using more convective and less diffusive dialysis. Of the latter 5 “dry” patients without severe cardiac dysfunction, 3/5 had no more hypotensive episodes after increasing dry weight and using incremental dialysis programs, and the remaining 2 dry patients could be completely switched off dialysis due to vivid residual function. 3/5 of the “dry patients” had a baseline pulse pressure &gt; 120 mmHg and 3 had coronary artery disease, both possibly predisposing to diastolic under-filling. No patients in this study presented with significant myocardial stunning, defined as a &gt; 10 % decrease in LVEF compared to baseline. Conclusion Severe, intra-dialytic hypotension requiring vasopressors may be prevented by individual tailoring of dialysis prescription. Ultrasound may help phenotyping patients requiring different dialysis strategies, including stopping dialysis entirely. Stunning and allergic reactions seemed rare. At baseline, patients seemed to be mainly 1) either over-dialyzed (hypovolemic or hypo-osmotic) or 2) having significant cardiac disease, naturally requiring quite opposite preventive strategies. A decrease in left ventricular preload furthermore occurred in all patients at onset of hypotension, suggesting crossover of a patient-specific preload threshold.


Author(s):  
Charalampos Loutradis ◽  
Pantelis A Sarafidis ◽  
Charles J Ferro ◽  
Carmine Zoccali

Abstract Volume overload in haemodialysis (HD) patients associates with hypertension and cardiac dysfunction and is a major risk factor for all-cause and cardiovascular mortality in this population. The diagnosis of volume excess and estimation of dry weight is based largely on clinical criteria and has a notoriously poor diagnostic accuracy. The search for accurate and objective methods to evaluate dry weight and to diagnose subclinical volume overload has been intensively pursued over the last 3 decades. Most methods have not been tested in appropriate clinical trials and their usefulness in clinical practice remains uncertain, except for bioimpedance spectroscopy and lung ultrasound (US). Bioimpedance spectroscopy is possibly the most widely used method to subjectively quantify fluid distributions over body compartments and produces reliable and reproducible results. Lung US provides reliable estimates of extravascular water in the lung, a critical parameter of the central circulation that in large part reflects the left ventricular end-diastolic pressure. To maximize cardiovascular tolerance, fluid removal in volume-expanded HD patients should be gradual and distributed over a sufficiently long time window. This review summarizes current knowledge about the diagnosis, prognosis and treatment of volume overload in HD patients.


2012 ◽  
Vol 30 ◽  
pp. e173
Author(s):  
Daigoro Hirohama ◽  
Tatsuo Shimosawa ◽  
Yoshitaka Ishibashi ◽  
Shengyu Mu ◽  
Fumiko Kawakami-Mori ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 77 (1) ◽  
pp. 60-69 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zoran Paunic ◽  
Milica Dekleva-Manojlovic ◽  
Natasa Markovic-Nikolic ◽  
Nemanja Rancic ◽  
Nada Dimkovic

Background/Aim. Overhydration (OH) and shortcomings of clinical assessment of so called ?dry weight? in hemodialysis (HD) patients are well known risk factors for high cardiovascular morbidity and mortality in this population. The purpose of this prospective randomized study was to investigate possible benefits of the active fluid management (AFM) guided by bioimpedance spectroscopy (BIS) on cardiac morphology, mechanics and function in chronic hemodialysis patients. Methods. The study lasted 9 months and 83 BIS naive patients were enrolled. Cardiac structural and functional characteristics were obtained using two dimensional Doppler echocardiography and global strains by speckle tracking modality. In addition, cardiac markers were measured. Results. Seventy three patients completed the study (38 in the active ? AFM group and 35 in the control group). At the end of the study, the main structural change in the active group of patients was reduction of left ventricular mass index (from 62.81 ? 19.74 g/m2.7 to 57.74 ? 16.87g/m2..7; p = 0.007), while main functional improvements in this group were better left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF; from 41.27 ? 9.26% to 43.95 ? 8.84%; p = 0.006) and fractional shortening (FS; 27.86 ? 5.94% to 29.86 ? 5.83%; p = 0.056) in accordance with improvement of radial left ventricular (LV) mechanics detected by higher global radial strain (GRS) (18.56 ? 10.24% to 21.79 ? 12.16%; p = 0.014). The diastolic function of patients in the control group worsened significantly, assessed as ratio of Doppler velocity of early diastolic filling of left ventricle ? E, and average velocity of tissue Doppler measured at lateral part of the mitral annulus (e? lateral; E/e? lateral ratio 10.59 ? 5.00 to 11.12 ? 4.06; p = 0.036) and consecutively the right ventricular systolic pressure (RVSP) estimated indirectly by echocardiography: from 34.84 ? 10.18 mmHg to 38.76 ? 8.34 mmHg; p = 0.028. These functional changes were in correlation with significantly higher levels of Nterminal prohormone brain natriuretic peptide (NTproBNP) in this group of patients [median and interquartile range (IQR): 5810.0 pg/mL (3339.0?15627.0 pg/mL) to 8024.0 pg/mL (4433.0?17467.0 pg/mL; p = 0.038)]. The improvement in the LV structure and function in the active group correlated with better relative overhydration (ROH) management in this group ? the proportion of ?critically? overhydrated patients decreased from 45% at the start to 24% at the end of study (p = 0.003). At the end of the study, there were 49% of post-dialysis ?critically? dehydrated patients in the control group. Proportion of anuric patients increased only in the control group (63% to 77%; p = 0.063). Conclusion. Active fluid management, guided by bioimpedance spectroscopy had positive impact on cardiac hemodynamics and mechanics in our study patients and could improve clinical decisions regarding their optimal weight and further clinical course. Further data from well designed studies are needed urgently.


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