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Prisma
Certification Package
106
Other
Professional
02/14/2012

Additional Other Flashcards

 


 

Cards

Term
What are the advantages of Prisma?
Definition
  • reduce hemodynamic instability
  • reduced possibility of ischemia of renal tubules
Term
What does CRRT stand for?
Definition
Continuous renal replacement therapy.
Term
What is Prisma's other name?
Definition
Slow continuous dialysis.
Term
What is the function of Prisma?
Definition

Removal of fluid

Removal of solutes

Removal of waste products

Term
Define SCUF
Definition
Slow continuous ultrafiltration
Fluid removal by ultrafiltration
Term
Define CAVH
Definition
Continuous arterio-venous hemofiltration
Term
Define and describe CVVH
Definition

Continuous veno-venous hemofiltration

Plasma water and solutes - removed by convection and UF using blood, effluent and replacement pumps

 

Term
Define CAVHD
Definition
Continous arterio-venous hemodialysis
Term
Define and describe CVVHD
Definition

Continuous veno-venous hemodialysis

Diffusion and UF are achieved using the blood, effluent and dialysate pumps.

Term
Define and describe CVVHDF
Definition

Continuous veno-venous hemodiafiltration

Convection, diffusion and UF are achieved using blood, dialysate, effluent and replacement pumps.

Term
What decade was the concept of CRRT first introduced?
Definition
1950's
Term
What year did CVVH and CVVHD gain acceptance in clinical practice?
Definition
1992
Term
Who are the target population for CRRT?
Definition

Hemodynamically unstable ICU patient with 

ARF

severe fluid volume overload

NB: there are also many other indications for CRRT

Term
What are 8 renal indications for CRRT?
Definition
1. Non-obstructive oliguria (U/O 30mmol/l) 4. Progressive severe dysnatremia 5. Rhabdomyolysis (Crush injuries) 6. Hyperphosphatemia 7. ARF in the context of MSOF
Term
What are the 15 non-renal indication for CRRT?
Definition
  1. Significant organ oedema (especially lung)
  2. Sepsis
  3. SIRS
  4. MSOF
  5. ARDS
  6. Fulminant hepatic failure
  7. Severe burns
  8. Cerebral oedema
  9. Tumor lysis syndrome
  10. Coagulopathy requiring large amounts of blood products in patients at high risk of developing ARDS or pulmonary oedema
  11. Cardiopulmonary bypass
  12. Suspected uremic organ involvement (pericarditis)
  13. CHF
  14. Lactic acidosis
  15. Drug overdose with toxin removable by extracorporeal therapy
Term
Define SIRS
Definition
Systemic inflammatory response syndrome
Term
Define MSOF
Definition
Multi system organ failure
Term
Define ARDS
Definition
Adult respiratory distress syndrome
Term

What is tumor lysis syndrome?

Definition
  • A group of metabolic complications occuring after cancer treatment (usually lymphomas and leukemias)
  • Caused by the breakdown of dying cancer cells
  • Results in hyperkalemia, hyperphosphatemia, hyperuricemia, hyperuricosuria, hypocalcemia.
  • Leads to acute uric acid neuropathy  (renal tubular obstruction by urate and uric acid crystals; increased tubular pressures) and acute renal failure
Term
What is azotemia?
Definition

Increased BUN (normal 8-20 mg/dL)

Increased creatinine (normal 0.7-1.4 mg/dL)

Term
What is the difference in fluid and solute removal between CRRT and IHD (intermittant hemodialysis)?
Definition

CRRT allows slow, continuous and adaptable fluid and solute removal over a 24hr period

IHD provides rapid fluid and solute removal over 3-4hr period

Term
Why is CRRT often the treatment of choice in a hemodynamically unstable patient?
Definition

Fluid and solute removal is slower, thus reducing risk of hypotensive episodes and allowing management of fluid volume.

IHD has higher risk of hypotensive episodes because of rapid fluid removal.

Term
What advantages are there to the continuous therapy of CRRT compared to IHD other than reducing hypotensive episodes?
Definition

 

  • Continuous control of electrolytes, pH and uremia
  • Optimization of nutritional support with TPN (IHD requires fluid, protein and diet restrictions b/w dialysis sessions)
  • Convective therapy allows a wider range of solute clearance (IHD therapy based on diffusion)
  • Sterile system as no water hookup required.
  • Reduced risk of clotting and subsequent blood loss with smaller filter and circuit
  • high velocity blood flow and circuit volume reduce the extracorporeal circuit volume
  • Managed by ICU nurses rather than dialysis nurses
  • On-screen instructions and 24/7 phone support


Term
What are the potential sources of contamination by pyrogens, bacteria and water contaminants using IHD?
Definition
  • non-sterile dialysate
  • stagnant bicarbonate solution
  • contamination of fluid compartments
  • chlorine exposure
Term
What does SLED stand for and what other term is used to define it?
Definition

Sustained low-efficiency dialysis

nocturnal dialysis (usually 8-12hrs overnight 6 days a week)

Term
Define ultrafiltration
Definition

Pressure gradient (hydrostatic pressure) created by the effluent pump forces fluid containing solutes and plasma water across the semipermeable membrane.

 

Term
Which CRRT modalities use Ultrafiltration?
Definition

SCUF, CVVH, CVVHDF

to a lesser extent CVVHD

Term
Define Convection
Definition

The movement of solutes with fluid.

Also called "solvent drag"

Occurs during ultrafiltration.

Term
Which CRRT modalities use convection?
Definition

Convection is the main transport mechanism in CVVH and CVVHDF.

 

Term
Define Diffusion
Definition
The movement of solutes from a higher concentration to a lower concentration
Term
How does Diffusion work in CRRT?
Definition

Solutes move from a higher to a lower concentration across the semi-permeable membrane into the dialysate compartment of the filter.

The dialysate flows in the opposite direction to the blood causing continual diffusion of solutes.

Term
Which CRRT modalities use diffusion?
Definition

CVVHD and CVVHDF

They require a dialysis pump.

Term
Define Absorption
Definition

Adherance of some molecules to the membrane surface.

eg. inflammatory mediators

Term
Quf stands for?
Definition
ultrafiltration rate in ml/min transferred across membrane for a given pressure gradient.
Term
Another acronym for UFR?
Definition

ultrafiltration rate or

Quf

Term
DFR
Definition
Dialysis flow rate
Term
Another acronym for DFR
Definition

Dialysis flow rate or

Qd

Term
BFR
Definition
Blood flow rate
Term
Another acronym for BFR?
Definition

Blood flow rate or

Qb

Term
RFR stands for?
Definition
Replacement flow rate in ml/hr
Term
Another acronym for RFR?
Definition

Replacement flow rate or

Qr

Term
In which two modalities can fluid be removed at up to 2L/hr?
Definition
SCUF and CRRT
Term
What factors affect Clearance?
Definition

Solute molecular size

Semi-permeable membrance pore size

Blood flow rates (?)

Term
What do Daltons measure?
Definition
Molecular size
Term
A small molecular size is...?
Definition

<300 daltons

urea, creatinine, sodium

glucose, uric acid, phosphate

potassium, phosphorus

Term
An intermediate molecular size is...?
Definition

500-5,000 daltons

vitamin B12

 

Term
A large molecular size is....?
Definition

5,000-50,000 daltons

LMW proteins - beta2 microglobulins, cytokines, myoglobulin

albumin

inulin

Term
Small molecules pass through the semi-permeable membrane by the processes of...
Definition
Diffusion and convection.
Term
Intermediate and large molecules pass through the semi-permeable membrance primarily by...
Definition
Convection
Term
Up to what size molecules will the AN69 hemofilter (Prisma M100 set) allow passage?
Definition
<50,000 daltons
Term
What is the sieving coefficient?
Definition
The ability of a substance to pass through a membrance from the blood compartment to the UF compartment. Also affected by pressure - increases the sieving coefficient
Term
What does a sieving coefficient of 1 mean?
Definition
It means that a susbstance can pass freely through the membrance. A sieving coefficient of 0 will not allow the substance to pass.
Chloride = 0.94 sodium = 1 albumin = 0.0
Term
What is the sieving coefficient equation?
Definition
Divide the UF solute concentration by the plasma solute concentration.
Term
How do you calculate solute loss?
Definition
UF rate (l/hr) X blood solute concentration X sieving coefficient = solute loss/hr
Term
What modality and flow rate produces the greatest solute clearance?
Definition
CVVHDF
Replacement solution at 2000ml/hr
Dialysate solution at 2500ml/hr
Term
In CVVHD, how would you increase the solute clearance rate?
Definition
Increase the dialysate solution flow rate (up to 2500ml/hr)
Term
In CVVH how would you increase the solute clearance rate?
Definition
Increase the replacement solution flow rate up to 2000ml/hr
Term
What most affects clearances of solutes, blood or effluent flow rates?
Definition
Clearances are dependant on the effluent flow rate.
Term
What special concern is there regarding ACE inhibitors with the Prisma M60 and Prisma M100 sets?
Definition
Acute allergic (anaphylactic) reactions within the first several minutes of treament. Antihistamines often ineffective. Discontinue treatment immediately.
Term
Which Prisma filter does not require precautions with ACE inhibitor administration?
Definition
Prisma HF 1000 set.
Term
Clotting Cascade review
Definition
Clotting cascade triggered when blood comes in contact with foreign material (i.e., hemofilter/dialyzer tubings and vascular access cannulas), causing the blood to clot via the intrinsic pathway.
Term
What anticoagulation therapies are used with CRRT?
Definition
UF Heparin, standard Heparin, LMWH, danaparoid sodium, citrate. prostanoids, hirudin, argatroban, proteinase inhibitors, saline flushes
Term
What drawback to using commercial Prisma solutions in liver failure or severe metabolic acidosis?
Definition
Standard commercial solutions contain a lactate buffer (acid).
Commercially prepared bicarbonate solutions are available
Term
Do dialysate and replacement solutions usually have the same electrolyte additives?
Definition
Yes
Term
What are the potential complications of CRRT
Definition
  • Infection (contamination of access or equipment
  • Vascular access complications related to vascular spasm (bfr too high), movt of catheter against wall of vessel, improper length of catheter
  • Fluid volume deficit (excessive fluid removal without adequate replacement)
  • Hypotension (volume depletion, cardiac dysfunction, vasoplegic state)
  • Electrolyte imbalance (high UF rates/clearance rates, inadequate replenishment of electrolytes (IV) or bicarb
  • acid/base imbalance (related to renal dysfunction or respiratory compromise)
  • Blood loss (anticoagulation). Ineffective anticoagulation causing filter clotting, disconnection, overcoagulation, blood filter leaks
  • Air embolus (leaks, faulty connections, hairline cracks on catheter, unarmed or malfunctioning air detector, line separation)
  • Reaction to AN69 hemofilter (reaction

 

Term
Pre CRRT patient assessment should include...
Definition

medical history (past and present)

current medications

relevant lab data

Term
Is it important to perform a head to toe assessment of the patient prior to commencement of CRRT?
Definition
Yes, to provide a baseline.
Term
Why is the recording of bowel patterns important as part of the pre CRRT assessment?
Definition
The presence of diarrhoea/incontinence might affect the hemodialysis catheter site selection.
Term
CNS assessment includes
Definition

mentation

orientation to person, place and time

ability to communicate

ICP if being used

function of cranial nerves

deep tendon reflexes of extremities

mobility/immobility

bilateral muscle strength

use of sedative/anesthetic agents, muscle relaxants or paralytic agents

Term
Cardiovascular assessment includes...
Definition

heart sounds - gallop, S4 S3, pericardial friction rub

blood pressure

baseline ECG, heart rate and rhythm

apical/radial pulses and peripheral pulses (presence and strength)

edema - location and amount

hemodynamic parameters - CVP, PAWP, PAD, CO, CI SV EF

core temperature

current cardiac medications/infusions, vasopressors

IABP

temporary or permanent pacemaker

ventricular assest device

cardiac reports (echo)

Term
Assessment of the respiratory system includes....
Definition

breath sounds and respiratory effort

CXR - presence/absence of pleural effusions, CHF, ARDS, pneumonia, pneumo etc

oxygenation status and baseline ABG

oxygen deliver system

if ventilated - mode and settings

ECMO - extracorporeal membrance oxygenator

bronchoscopy report if available

Term
Gastrointestinal assessment includes....
Definition

bowel sounds X four quadrants

bowel patterns - diarrhoea, incontinence, etc

presence of nasogastric, oral gastric or small bore feeding tube

nutritional status - oral, tube feeds, parenteral nutrition etc

diagnostic reports if available (endoscopy or proctoscopy)

Term
Renal assessment consists of....
Definition

fluid volume status - intake and output

weight - preadmission and current

etiology of renal failure - acute vs chronic

presence of foley

types and rates of fluids administered

types and amount of fluid loss from alternate sources - ie. chest drains, ng tube, wound drains, foley, stool, insensible losses

mucous membranes

electrolyte and acid-base balances

diagnostic renal studies - ie. ultrasound

Term
Dematologic assessment includes....
Definition

presence of surgical or trauma wounds, scars

skin integrity - presence of ulcers, rashes, ecchymosis, hematomas, induration, erythema

skin colour, temperature and turgor

presence and patency of IV and/or intrarterial catheters

Term
Hematological/Immunological assessment includes....
Definition

presence of known HIV, VRE, MRSA, Hep A, B, or C

diagnostic cultures/lab reports

current antibiotic administration

Term
Psychosocial assessment includes....
Definition

patient/family understanding of current illness and past medical illness

available support systems, religious affiliations

patient/family past effective coping mechanisms

patient/family teaching of CRRT therapy

Term
Which pump is coded purple and what does it do?
Definition

Replacement pump

delivers replacement solution into the blood flow path

maximum 8000ml/hr

Term
What colour code is the Replacement pump?
Definition
Purple
Term
What is the maxiumum rate of the Replacement pump
Definition
8000ml/hr
Term
Where does the Replacement Pump deliver it's solution?
Definition
Into the blood flowpath.
Term
What colour code is used for the Dialysiate/Replacement 2 pump?
Definition
Green
Term
Where does the green Dialysate/Replacement 2 pump get delivered to in the Prisma system?
Definition
The fluid compartment of the filter
Term
What is the maxiumum amount of dialysate/replacement 2 pump solution that can be delivered per hour?
Definition
8000 ml/hr
Term
What position in the group of four pumps on the Prisma machine is the Replacement pump located?
Definition
Bottom right
Term
Where does the yellow Effluent pump sit in the four Prisma pumps.
Definition
Upper left
Term
How would you describe the action of the Blood Pump?
Definition

occlusive

peristaltic

conveys the blood through the flowpath of the set and back to the patient

Term
What is the maxiumum flow rate of the Blood Pump?
Definition
Up to 450ml/min
Term
What solutions are pumped by the yellow Effluent pump?
Definition
Ultrafiltrate and dialysate solutions
Term
What is the maximum flow rate of the Effluent Pump?
Definition
Up to 10,000ml/hr
Term
What four factors does the Effluent Pump take into consideration when setting the Ultrafiltration rate?
Definition

Current patient fluid removal rate

Pre blood pump rate

Replacement rate

Dialysate rate

Term
Which pump controls the Ultrafiltration Rate?
Definition
Effluent Pump
Term
Where does the Pre Blood Pump enter the system and why?
Definition

Delivers sterile infusion solution into the blood access line before the blood pump

for anticoagulation and predilution

Term
What are the possible flow rates for the Pre Blood Pump?
Definition

Flow rate depends on the therapy and set being used

Flow rate 500-4000ml/hr

Term
What can the Pre Blood Pump not exceed?
Definition
Blood Flow Rate
Term
If you were to hang the four bags under the Prisma machine from left to right, what order would the pump bags be in and what colour code will you see?
Definition

Left to right:

Effluent - yellowcircle

Pre Blood Pump - white triangle

Dialysate - green square

Replacement - purple hexagon

Term
What is the term used to describe the ability of a substance to pass through  a membrane from the blood compartment to the ultrafiltration compartment?
Definition
The Sieving Coefficient
Term
Where is the Blood Warmer connected and when?
Definition

Connects to the return line before the aeration chamber

Must be connected during setup

Term
If you were to divide the Ultrafiltrate solute concentration by the plasma solute concentration, what would you be measuring?
Definition
The solute coefficient.
Term
If you multiplied the ultrafiltration rate (l/hr) X the blood solute concentration X the sieving coefficient, what would you be measuring?
Definition
The solute loss/hour
Term
Most common reasons to use Prisma
Definition

Fluid overload

Electrolyte imbalances (K+)

ARF

Term
What are the normal access pressure range and limits?
Definition

Normal range: -50 to -150mmHg

Limits: -250 to +300mmHg

Term
What are the normal range and limits for the filter pressure?
Definition

Normal range: +100 to +250mmHg

Limits: -50 to +450mmHg

Term
What are the normal range and limits for the return pressure?
Definition

Normal range: =50 to =150mmHg

Limits: -50 to +350mmHg

Term
What are the normal range and limits for the effluent pressure
Definition

Normal range: -150 to +150mmHg

Limits: -350 to +350mmHg

Term

What is the Filter Pressure Drop?

How is it measured?

Definition

Used to assess the condition of the hollow fibres of the filter (for micro clots).

Measures the pressure difference between the top and the bottom of the filter.

Filter pressure minus return pressure

Term
What measurement assesses the  hollow filter fibres for the presence of micro clots?
Definition
Filter Pressure Drop
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