An infection called peritonitis may be a deadly condition for some kidney failure patients.

Neil Boudville (University of Western Australia, in Perth) and his colleagues evaluated whether peritonitis affects the survival of patients on peritoneal dialysis. They looked at information from all kidney failure patients (1,316 individuals) who received dialysis in Australia and New Zealand from May 2004 through December 2009 and who died while undergoing treatment or soon after.
Compared with the rest of the year, patients were more likely to develop peritonitis during the 120 days prior to their death, and even more so during the final month before their death. Specifically, they were six times as likely to develop peritonitis during the 30 days prior to their death compared with six months earlier.
"We have therefore proposed a potential new definition for a cause of death-"peritonitis-associated death"-being any death within 30 days of an episode of peritonitis," said Prof Boudville.
Source-Newswise