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Clinical Research
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Randomized Clinical Trial of Dialysate Cooling and Effects on Brain White Matter

Mohamed T. Eldehni, Aghogho Odudu and Christopher W. McIntyre
JASN April 2015, 26 (4) 957-965; DOI: https://doi.org/10.1681/ASN.2013101086
Mohamed T. Eldehni
Division of Medical Sciences and Graduate Entry Medicine, School of Medicine, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, United Kingdom
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Aghogho Odudu
Division of Medical Sciences and Graduate Entry Medicine, School of Medicine, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, United Kingdom
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Christopher W. McIntyre
Division of Medical Sciences and Graduate Entry Medicine, School of Medicine, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, United Kingdom
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Abstract

Hemodialysis is associated with significant circulatory stress that could produce recurrent and cumulative ischemic insults to multiple organs, such as the brain. We aimed to characterize hemodialysis-induced brain injury by longitudinally studying the effects of hemodialysis on brain white matter microstructure and further examine if the use of cooled dialysate could provide protection against hemodialysis-associated brain injury. In total, 73 patients on incident hemodialysis starting within 6 months were randomized to dialyze with a dialysate temperature of either 37°C or 0.5°C below the core body temperature and followed up for 1 year. Brain white matter microstructure was studied by diffusion tensor magnetic resonance imaging at baseline and follow-up (38 patients available for paired analysis). Intradialytic hemodynamic stress was quantified using the extrema points analysis model. Patients on hemodialysis exhibited a pattern of ischemic brain injury (increased fractional anisotropy and reduced radial diffusivity). Cooled dialysate improved hemodynamic tolerability, and changes in brain white matter were associated with hemodynamic instability (higher mean arterial pressure extrema points frequencies were associated with higher fractional anisotropy [peak r=0.443, P<0.03] and lower radial diffusivity [peak r=−0.439, P<0.02]). Patients who dialyzed at 0.5°C below core body temperature exhibited complete protection against white matter changes at 1 year. Our data suggest that hemodialysis results in significant brain injury and that improvement in hemodynamic tolerability achieved by using cooled dialysate is effective at abrogating these effects. This intervention can be delivered without additional cost and is universally applicable.

  • hemodialysis
  • cardiovascular
  • BP
  • Copyright © 2015 by the American Society of Nephrology
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Journal of the American Society of Nephrology: 26 (4)
Journal of the American Society of Nephrology
Vol. 26, Issue 4
April 2015
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Randomized Clinical Trial of Dialysate Cooling and Effects on Brain White Matter
Mohamed T. Eldehni, Aghogho Odudu, Christopher W. McIntyre
JASN Apr 2015, 26 (4) 957-965; DOI: 10.1681/ASN.2013101086

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Randomized Clinical Trial of Dialysate Cooling and Effects on Brain White Matter
Mohamed T. Eldehni, Aghogho Odudu, Christopher W. McIntyre
JASN Apr 2015, 26 (4) 957-965; DOI: 10.1681/ASN.2013101086
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More in this TOC Section

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  • Diagnosis, Education, and Care of Patients with APOL1-Associated Nephropathy: A Delphi Consensus and Systematic Review
  • Protocadherin 7–Associated Membranous Nephropathy
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Cited By...

  • Normalization of Cerebral Blood Flow, Neurochemicals, and White Matter Integrity after Kidney Transplantation
  • Normalization of Cerebral Blood Flow, Neurochemicals, and White Matter Integrity After Kidney Transplantation
  • Kidney Disease, Intensive Hypertension Treatment, and Risk for Dementia and Mild Cognitive Impairment: The Systolic Blood Pressure Intervention Trial
  • Intradialytic Cerebral Hypoperfusion as Mechanism for Cognitive Impairment in Patients on Hemodialysis
  • Renal Perfusion during Hemodialysis: Intradialytic Blood Flow Decline and Effects of Dialysate Cooling
  • Associations between Hemodialysis Facility Practices to Manage Fluid Volume and Intradialytic Hypotension and Patient Outcomes
  • Investigating the Relationship between Cerebral Blood Flow and Cognitive Function in Hemodialysis Patients
  • Mechanisms, Clinical Implications, and Treatment of Intradialytic Hypotension
  • Filtering the Evidence: Is There a Cognitive Cost of Hemodialysis?
  • Hemodialysis Induces an Acute Decline in Cerebral Blood Flow in Elderly Patients
  • Relationship between Hypotension and Cerebral Ischemia during Hemodialysis
  • Bicarbonate Balance and Prescription in ESRD
  • Metabolic Profiling of Impaired Cognitive Function in Patients Receiving Dialysis
  • Dying to Feel Better: The Central Role of Dialysis-Induced Tissue Hypoxia
  • Effect of Lowering the Dialysate Temperature in Chronic Hemodialysis: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
  • Randomized Controlled Trial of Individualized Dialysate Cooling for Cardiac Protection in Hemodialysis Patients
  • Lower Dialysate Temperature in Hemodialysis: Is It a Cool Idea?
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