Abstract

BackgroundEvaluation of patient’s dry weight remains challenging in chronic hemodialysis (HD) especially in children. Inferior Vena Cava (IVC) measurement was reported useful to assess fluid overload both in adults and children.MethodsWe performed a monocentric prospective study to evaluate the relation between predialytic IVC diameter measurements and hydration status evaluated by physicians and bioimpedance spectroscopy (BIS) and between IVC measurements and persistent hypertension.ResultsForty-eight HD sessions in 16 patients were analyzed. According to physicians, patients were overhydrated in 84.5% of dialysis sessions, 20.8% according to BIS, and 0%, 4.1% and 20.8% according to IVC inspiratory, expiratory and collapsibility index reference curves respectively. There was no correlation between relative overhydration evaluated by BIS and IVC measurements z-scores (p = 0.20). Patients whose blood pressure normalized after HD had a more dilated maximal IVC diameter before dialysis session than patients with persistent hypertension (median − 0.07SD [−0.8; 0.88] versus −1.61SD [−2.18; −0.74] (p = 0.03)) with an optimal cut-off of −0.5 SD.ConclusionsIn our study, IVC measurement is not reliable to assess fluid overload in children on HD and was not correlated with extracellular fluid volume assessed by BIS measurements. However, IVC measurements might be of interest in differentiating volume-dependant hypertension from volume-independant hypertension.

Highlights

  • Evaluation of patient’s dry weight remains challenging in chronic hemodialysis (HD) especially in children

  • Many methods exist to complete the clinical evaluation of the hydration status: cardiothoracic index based on chest X-ray evaluation, Inferior Vena Cava (IVC) diameter evaluated by ultrasound, biomarkers like Brain Natriuretic Peptide, Bioimpedance Spectroscopy (BIS), plasmatic volume variation monitoring [6] and recently lung ultrasound [7]

  • Blood pressure is reported in Systolic blood pressure (SBP) index (SBP divided by SBP 95th percentile) and diastolic blood pressure (DBP) index (DBP divided by DBP 95th percentile)

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Summary

Introduction

Evaluation of patient’s dry weight remains challenging in chronic hemodialysis (HD) especially in children. Many methods exist to complete the clinical evaluation of the hydration status: cardiothoracic index based on chest X-ray evaluation, Inferior Vena Cava (IVC) diameter evaluated by ultrasound, biomarkers like Brain Natriuretic Peptide, Bioimpedance Spectroscopy (BIS), plasmatic volume variation monitoring [6] and recently lung ultrasound [7]. A strict management of the hydration status based on BIS evaluation was found effective in decreasing Left Ventricular Mass Index and all-cause and cardiovascular mortalities [8, 9].

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