Dialysis
Dialysis treatment replaces the function of the kidneys,
which normally serve as the body's natural filtration system. Through the use of a blood
filter and a chemical solution known as dialysate, the treatment removes waste products
and excess fluids from the bloodstream, while maintaining the proper chemical balance of
the blood. There are two types of dialysis treatment ; hemodialysis and peritoneal
dialysis.
Dialysis can be used in the treatment of patients suffering from poisoning or overdose,
in order to quickly remove drugs from the bloodstream. Its most prevalent application,
however, is for patients with temporary or permanent kidney failure. For patients with
end-stage renal disease (ESRD), whose kidneys are no longer capable of adequately removing
fluids and wastes from their body or of maintaining the proper level of certain
kidney-regulated chemicals in the bloodstream, dialysis is the only treatment option
available outside of kidney transplantation. In 1996 in the United States, over 200,000
people underwent regular dialysis treatments to manage their ESRD. |