n medicine, hemodialysis (also haemodialysis) is a method for removing
waste products such as potassium and urea, as well as free water from the blood
when the kidneys are incapable of this (i.e. in renal failure). It is a form of
renal dialysis and is therefore a renal replacement therapy.
In medicine, peritoneal dialysis is a method for removing waste such as
urea and potassium from the blood, as well as excess fluid, when the kidneys are
incapable of this (i.e. in renal failure). It is a form of renal dialysis, and
is thus a renal replacement therapy.
Peritoneal dialysis:
Technique that uses the patient's own body tissues inside of the belly
(abdominal cavity) to act as a filter. The intestines lie in the abdominal
cavity, the space between the abdominal wall and the spine. A plastic tube
called a "dialysis catheter" is placed through the abdominal wall into the
abdominal cavity. A special fluid is then flushed into the abdominal cavity and
washes around the intestines. The intestinal walls act as a filter between this
fluid and the blood stream. By using different types of solutions, waste
products and excess water can be removed from the body through this process.
Hemodialysis:
A medical procedure that uses a special machine (a dialysis machine) to
filter waste products from the blood and to restore normal constituents to it.
This shuffling of multiple substances is accomplished by virtue of the
differences in the rates of their diffusion through a semipermeable membrane (a
dialysis membrane).
Although hemodialysis may be done for acute kidney failure, it is more
often employed for chronic renal disease. Hemodialysis is frequently done to
treat end-stage kidney disease. Under such circumstances, kidney dialysis is
typically administered using a fixed schedule of three times per week.
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