Home Hemodialysis
Thursday, November 22, 2007
Joshua Schwimmer, MD, FACP, FASN
Hemodialysis is a process of cleaning and filtering the blood using a dialysis machine (a "man made kidney"). For people with renal failure, dialysis is lifesaving. (This posting will only discuss hemodialysis. Peritoneal dialysis is another form of dialysis that works equally well.)

Previously, hemodialysis was only performed in dialysis centers. Typically, dialysis centers are large rooms with twenty or more dialysis machines, nurses, technicians, doctors, and other staff. In the United States, patients usually travel to these centers three times a week and spend three to four hours per dialysis session.
In the last few years, hemodialysis performed at home has become more popular. Dialysis machines were previously large and difficult to transport. Recently, these machines have become more compact, making dialysis at home (or even mobile dialysis) more practical.
Home hemodialysis also offers more flexible treatment options than "in-center" dialysis. In addition to three times a week dialysis for three to four hours, other options include
- short daily dialysis, five or six times a week, for two to three hours a session
- nocturnal dialysis, performed while sleeping, for six to eight hours a night, three or more nights a week
Some data suggests that patient outcomes may be better with daily dialysis and nocturnal dialysis compared with three times a week dialysis.
The NxStage System One is an example of a compact, portable, easy to use home dialysis machine. The machine weighs about 75 pounds. More information may be found
here.
Related Information:
Kidney Replacement Therapies
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4 Comments:
At Sat Nov 24, 10:09:00 AM 2007,
Huck said…
As long as the patient can safely remain infection free, I think home nocturnal dialysis is the future. Patients with daily dialysis fare better than three times a week. Indeed, more dialysis patients die of sudden cardiac death during their 2 day holiday than at any other time during the dialysis week.
At Tue Jan 08, 09:32:00 AM 2008,
Anonymous said…
this is more a question than a comment. how do you clean the machines. is it any different than how they clean there's at a center?
At Tue Jan 08, 09:35:00 AM 2008,
lvjus said…
do you clean the home machines the same as theydo at the center?
At Wed Apr 30, 08:17:00 AM 2008,
Anonymous said…
Is dialysis patient safe to drive after a 6-7 hour session?
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