Patients will soon not have to undergo lengthy dialysis sessions, thanks to researchers from University of California, Los Angeles, who are developing automated, wearable artificial kidneys.
Researchers from University of California, Los Angeles, are developing automated, wearable artificial kidneys that may make "dialysis on the go" a reality in near future.
The design for the peritoneal-based artificial kidney is "bloodless" and reduces or eliminates protein loss and other dialysis-related problems.According Martin Roberts, an assistant professor of clinical medicine at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA the new technique is based on the principles an artificial kidney machine developed in 1980.
The automated, wearable artificial kidney, or AWAK, would help in avoid the complications patients often suffer with traditional dialysis.
"What's really new about it is the patient's freedom," said Roberts.
"To me, as the inventor, the most important thing for the patients is their freedom. The next important thing is that because it's working all the time instead of intermittently, you can do a much better job of treating the patient. So we expect the patient to feel better and live longer," he added.
In traditional dialysis, patients are hooked up to a machine for four hours, three times a week. It filters the blood and removes toxins. The filtered blood is then pumped back into the body.
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The AWAK would function continuously, as natural kidneys do, eliminating patient "shocks."
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"Dialysis-on-the-go, made possible by AWAK's 'wearability' and automation, frees end-stage renal failure patients from the servitude that is demanded by the current dialytic regimentations," wrote the researchers.
The study appears online in the current issue of the journal Clinical and Experimental Nephrology.
Source-ANI
RAS/K