Abstract

Before dialysis, acetate levels in hemodialyzed patients (0.27–1.1 mmol/l) were more dispersed than in normal subjects (0.20–0.65 mmol/l) and the mean value of plasma acetate was slightly higher (0.52 mmol/l versus 0.31 mmol/l). Though dialysis conditions were almost identical, the acetate kinetics during hemodialysis were very different: in most subjects, plasma acetate concentrations reached a “plateau” (mean value 5.6 mmol/l) whereas in others a continuous rise was observed, suggesting that with patients having chronic renal failure there were important individual or occasional differences in the ability to metabolize acetate. The acetate loads per minute (or mass transfers) were calculated from the blood compartment with plasma values (plasma flow and concentrations), rather than from the dialysate and using the combined calculations (plasma and whole blood values). The results ranged between 2.4 and 4.1 mmol/min. A very important and rapid fall in arterial acetate concentrations occurs in the first 20 min after the end of the dialysis and proves the rapid turnover of the acetate in man.

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