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Citrate Anticoagulation for CRRT in Children: Comparison with Heparin

Regional anticoagulation with citrate is an alternative to heparin in continuous renal replacement therapies, which may prolong circuit lifetime and decrease hemorrhagic complications. A retrospective comparative cohort study based on a prospective observational registry was conducted including crit...

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Autores principales: Fernández, Sara Nicole, Santiago, Maria José, López-Herce, Jesús, García, Miriam, Del Castillo, Jimena, Alcaraz, Andrés José, Bellón, Jose María
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hindawi Publishing Corporation 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4137493/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25157369
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2014/786301
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author Fernández, Sara Nicole
Santiago, Maria José
López-Herce, Jesús
García, Miriam
Del Castillo, Jimena
Alcaraz, Andrés José
Bellón, Jose María
author_facet Fernández, Sara Nicole
Santiago, Maria José
López-Herce, Jesús
García, Miriam
Del Castillo, Jimena
Alcaraz, Andrés José
Bellón, Jose María
author_sort Fernández, Sara Nicole
collection PubMed
description Regional anticoagulation with citrate is an alternative to heparin in continuous renal replacement therapies, which may prolong circuit lifetime and decrease hemorrhagic complications. A retrospective comparative cohort study based on a prospective observational registry was conducted including critically ill children undergoing CRRT. Efficacy, measured as circuit survival, and secondary effects of heparin and citrate were compared. 12 patients on CRRT with citrate anticoagulation and 24 patients with heparin anticoagulation were analyzed. Median citrate dose was 2.6 mmol/L. Median calcium dose was 0.16 mEq/kg/h. Median heparin dose was 15 UI/kg/h. Median circuit survival was 48 hours with citrate and 31 hours with heparin (P = 0.028). 66.6% of patients treated with citrate developed mild metabolic alkalosis, which was directly related to citrate dose. There were no cases of citrate intoxication: median total calcium/ionic calcium index (CaT/I) of 2.16 and a maximum CaT/I of 2.33, without metabolic acidosis. In the citrate group, 45.5% of patients developed hypochloremia and 27.3% hypomagnesemia. In the heparin group, 27.8% developed hypophosphatemia. Three patients were moved from heparin to citrate to control postoperatory bleeding. In conclusion citrate is a safe and effective anticoagulation method for CRRT in children and it achieves longer circuit survival than heparin.
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spelling pubmed-41374932014-08-25 Citrate Anticoagulation for CRRT in Children: Comparison with Heparin Fernández, Sara Nicole Santiago, Maria José López-Herce, Jesús García, Miriam Del Castillo, Jimena Alcaraz, Andrés José Bellón, Jose María Biomed Res Int Clinical Study Regional anticoagulation with citrate is an alternative to heparin in continuous renal replacement therapies, which may prolong circuit lifetime and decrease hemorrhagic complications. A retrospective comparative cohort study based on a prospective observational registry was conducted including critically ill children undergoing CRRT. Efficacy, measured as circuit survival, and secondary effects of heparin and citrate were compared. 12 patients on CRRT with citrate anticoagulation and 24 patients with heparin anticoagulation were analyzed. Median citrate dose was 2.6 mmol/L. Median calcium dose was 0.16 mEq/kg/h. Median heparin dose was 15 UI/kg/h. Median circuit survival was 48 hours with citrate and 31 hours with heparin (P = 0.028). 66.6% of patients treated with citrate developed mild metabolic alkalosis, which was directly related to citrate dose. There were no cases of citrate intoxication: median total calcium/ionic calcium index (CaT/I) of 2.16 and a maximum CaT/I of 2.33, without metabolic acidosis. In the citrate group, 45.5% of patients developed hypochloremia and 27.3% hypomagnesemia. In the heparin group, 27.8% developed hypophosphatemia. Three patients were moved from heparin to citrate to control postoperatory bleeding. In conclusion citrate is a safe and effective anticoagulation method for CRRT in children and it achieves longer circuit survival than heparin. Hindawi Publishing Corporation 2014 2014-08-03 /pmc/articles/PMC4137493/ /pubmed/25157369 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2014/786301 Text en Copyright © 2014 Sara Nicole Fernández et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Clinical Study
Fernández, Sara Nicole
Santiago, Maria José
López-Herce, Jesús
García, Miriam
Del Castillo, Jimena
Alcaraz, Andrés José
Bellón, Jose María
Citrate Anticoagulation for CRRT in Children: Comparison with Heparin
title Citrate Anticoagulation for CRRT in Children: Comparison with Heparin
title_full Citrate Anticoagulation for CRRT in Children: Comparison with Heparin
title_fullStr Citrate Anticoagulation for CRRT in Children: Comparison with Heparin
title_full_unstemmed Citrate Anticoagulation for CRRT in Children: Comparison with Heparin
title_short Citrate Anticoagulation for CRRT in Children: Comparison with Heparin
title_sort citrate anticoagulation for crrt in children: comparison with heparin
topic Clinical Study
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4137493/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25157369
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2014/786301
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