Health Library.com
MD Consult
MD Consult is the world's largest online medical library



Health Videos
Free Animated Health Videos for health education


Ask The Librarian
Find Out Everything Your Doctor Would Tell You -- If Only He Had the Time !


HELP in the News
Press article of HELP


Guided Tour of HELP
Take a Video Tour of HELP !

Have a look at the pictures of the library


Search
Search the entire Healthlibrary.com site. The search is powered by Google.


The patient's Doctor
Helping patients and doctors to talk to each other!


Support Us
Find out how your help can HELP to improve its services.


Book Reviews
Here we will present you with regular Book Reviews of our latest arrivals.


HELP Catalog
You can now search our catalog of over 8000 books and 10000 pamphlets online sitting at home !


Guestbook
Would you like to read what others have to say. We would love to hear from you...

Also read the Visitor's Comments


Seminar
HELP initiates a seminar and releases two books on improving the doctor patient relationship


Help Talks
HELP Talks are held on the 1st & 3rd Saturdays of every month at 1pm on a wide range of health topics.


Favourites
This section presents your favourite consumer health site


Limca Book of Records

News
Strap-on kidney for dialysis patients

December 15, 2007
Times of India

LONDON: Patients with chronic kidney failure could be freed from fixed dialysis machines, thanks to a wearable artificial kidney that has shown promising results in a pilot study.

British researchers said on Friday the battery-powered device, developed by US firm Xcorporeal Inc, had proved successful when worn for periods of four to eight hours.

The long-term goal is round-the-clock use, doing away altogether with the need for patients to be hooked up to a fixed haemodialysis machine in a hospital or clinic for 12 hours a week.

"The device has the potential to become a practical means of delivering extended and more frequent dialysis to patients with end-stage kidney failure," Andrew Davenport of University College London and colleagues wrote in the Lancet medical journal.

Further tests are now needed, since their small study involved only eight patients, with an average age of 52 years, who were established on regular haemodialysis before being fitted with the wearable - though rather bulky - device.

The rate of blood flow and the speed at which toxic chemicals were removed from the body was considerably slower than in conventional dialysis but this was not seen as a problem, since the device can be worn for long, continuous periods.

Two of the patients experienced blood clotting, due to receiving insufficient anticoagulant medication, and one was temporarily disconnected when a needle became dislodged.

Nonetheless, all the subjects said they would recommend the treatment to other patients with kidney failure, the researchers reported.

Nearly 1.3 million people worldwide suffer from chronic kidney failure that requires treatment with dialysis.

A lucky few receive a kidney transplant but donor organs are scarce.

In the long term, experts hope miniaturization and nanotechnology will provide more convenient and, ultimately, implantable devices that replicate the function of a healthy kidney. "The wearable artificial kidney reported today is a small first step in the long road to wearable blood-cleansing devices," said Garabed Eknoyan of Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, Texas.

The basic functional unit of the kidney is the nephron, of which there are more than a million within the cortex and medulla of each normal adult human kidney.