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Fluid overload, which is when your body has too much fluid, is one of the reasons why people on home dialysis need to go to the hospital. Fluid overload (when body has too much fluid) commonly presents as trouble breathing and leg swelling. Traditionally, doctors check for this by asking patients if they have any symptoms like leg swelling or shortness of breath and by doing a physical exam which includes listening to the lungs or looking for swelling in legs. However, a newer, safe, and non-invasive method called point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) has become very popular. However, we don't have a lot of research yet on how POCUS and LUS (lung ultrasound) specifically help home dialysis patients, including those on peritoneal dialysis or home hemodialysis. Peritoneal dialysis is a way to clean your blood by putting a special fluid into your belly through a small tube. The fluid uses the natural lining of your belly as a filter to remove waste and extra water. Home hemodialysis is a treatment where a machine acts like an artificial kidney to clean your blood. You get trained to do this yourself at home by connecting to the machine with a couple of needles, which cleans your blood of waste and extra fluid. POCUS, especially a (LUS), has been shown to be useful for dialysis patients in outpatient units.
This study will compare different 3 different methods of detecting fluid overload: answering various survey questions, completing a physical exam, and a LUS. The study seeks to determine which of these methods is the best method to determine fluid overload.
You were selected as a possible participant because you are over 18 years old, diagnosed with End-stage kidney disease, and have been receiving home dialysis for at least three months.
Full description
This study involves collecting information about you or from you. If you agree to be in the study, you will do your best to complete the following:
After this, you'll go to a private room for the ultrasound procedure:
You'll lie flat on your back, and we'll expose your chest. A small amount of gel will be put on your skin, and we'll use a handheld ultrasound device to lightly press on your chest. We'll scan eight specific areas on your chest (four on each side) to look for something called "B-lines," which can show if there's extra fluid in your lungs. This ultrasound part of the visit should only take about 10 to 15 minutes in total.
Care will be taken to expose only the area being scanned. A chaperone (someone else in the room) will be present for all female patients. All male patients will be asked if they want a chaperone. If they say yes, a chaperone will be present during the ultrasound procedure. After the ultrasound, we'll wipe off the gel with a cloth, and you'll be ready to leave the room.
We expect the entire study from enrollment to the completion of data collection for all subjects, to last 9 months. However, your study visit will last only for 30-60minutes.
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90 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Nupur Gupta; Srinath Yadlapalli
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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