Medical Daily, Justin Caba, May 23, 2014
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Italian
researchers develop miniaturized
dialysis machine for treating infants with
kidney failure. (Photo courtesy of
Shutterstock)
|
"This
is a pretty major advance for the smallest infants," Dr. Bethany Foster,
associate professor of pediatrics at the Montreal Children's Hospital in
Canada, said in an accompanying commentary. "I can't imagine the baby they
(treated) would have survived with the current technology. You have to be especially
vigilant with very small babies because what you're often doing amounts to
heroic treatment," Foster said. "We need to be careful that we don't
just do things because we can."
The
Cardio-Renal Pediatric Dialysis Emergency Machine (CARPEDIEM) was first used
back in August of last year to treat a 3-day-old infant weighing around 6.6
lbs., who was suffering from multiple organ failure, the Associated Press
reported. Prior to the treatment, the infant’s condition was so severe that
Ronco declared, “this baby was almost dead.” Following 25 days of dialysis
treatment with the CARPEDIEM, the infant’s organ function was restored and she
was discharged from the hospital with mild renal deficiency that did not
require renal replacement therapy. So far around 10 newborns across Europe have
been treated by the CARPEDIEM.
"We
have shown how the technical challenges of providing CRRT can be overcome
without relying on the adaptation of technology used in adult settings, and
that a CRRT device designed specifically for use in neonates and small children
can be used to safely and effectively treat acute kidney injury in small
pediatric patients,” Ronco explained. “We hope that our success will encourage
the development of other medical technologies specifically designed for infants
and small children."
Currently,
the standard form of treatment for infants less than 33 lbs. suffering from
kidney failure involves a continuous renal replacement therapy (CRRT) machine.
Waste products from the blood are removed via a catheter that is inserted into
the abdomen. Unfortunately, newborns with low-birth weight are sometimes too
small for this method to be effective. In some cases, too much fluid is
withdrawn, leading to dehydration and a drop in blood pressure, or too little
fluid is withdrawn, leading to high blood pressure and swelling caused by
excess fluid.

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