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Published in: Critical Care 5/2009

Open Access 01-10-2009 | Research

Methemoglobinemia in critically ill patients during extended hemodialysis and simultaneous disinfection of the hospital water supply

Authors: Martin Johannes Bek, Sven Laule, Christine Reichert-Jünger, Rainer Holtkamp, Michael Wiesner, Cornelius Keyl

Published in: Critical Care | Issue 5/2009

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Abstract

Introduction

To evaluate the cause of methemoglobinemia in patients undergoing extended daily hemodialysis/hemodiafiltration we analyzed the relationship between methemoglobinemia and the water disinfection schedule of the hospital.

Methods

We reviewed all arterial blood gas analyses, obtained over a one-year period, in patients undergoing extended hemodialysis/hemodiafiltration, and compared the methemoglobin concentrations obtained on the days when the water supply was disinfected, using a hydrogen peroxide/silver ion preparation, with data measured on disinfection-free days.

Results

The evaluation of 706 measurements revealed a maximum methemoglobin fraction of 1.0 (0.8; 1.2) % (median and 25th; 75th percentiles) during hemodialysis/hemodiafiltration on the disinfection-free days. The methemoglobin fraction increased to 5.9 (1.3; 8.4) % with a maximal value of 12.2% on the days of water disinfection (P < 0.001 compared to disinfection-free days). Spot checks on hydrogen peroxide concentrations in the water supply, the permeate, and the dialysate, using a semi-quantitative test, demonstrated levels between 10 and 25 mg/l during water disinfection.

Conclusions

Our results demonstrate that even a regular hospital water disinfection technique can be associated with significant methemoglobinemia during extended hemodialysis. Clinicians should be aware of this potential hazard.
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Metadata
Title
Methemoglobinemia in critically ill patients during extended hemodialysis and simultaneous disinfection of the hospital water supply
Authors
Martin Johannes Bek
Sven Laule
Christine Reichert-Jünger
Rainer Holtkamp
Michael Wiesner
Cornelius Keyl
Publication date
01-10-2009
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
Critical Care / Issue 5/2009
Electronic ISSN: 1364-8535
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/cc8128

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