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Perit Dial Int 16(Suppl_1): 137-140
1996
© 1996 International Society for Peritoneal Dialysis
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Peritoneal Dialysis International, Vol 16, Issue Suppl_1, S137-S140
Copyright © 1996 by International Society for Peritoneal Dialysis


Articles

Heat-sterilized PD fluid blocks leukocyte adhesion and increases flow velocity in rat peritoneal venules

P Jonasson, U Bagge, A Wieslander, and M Braide

Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, University of Goteborg, Sweden.

Data from cell culture experiments indicate that heat sterilization of peritoneal dialysis (PD) fluids produces cytotoxic glucose degradation products. The present vital microscopic study investigated the effects of different sterilization methods on the biocompatibility of PD fluids. Thus, heat-sterilized (commercially obtained and experimentally produced) and filter-sterilized PD fluids (pH = 5.30-5.40; 1.5% glucose) were compared with Tyrode buffer, with respect to the effects on microvascular blood flow velocity and leukocyte adhesion in the rat mesentery. Exteriorization of the mesentery produced a mild inflammation, known from the literature and characterized by the adhesive rolling of leukocytes along venular walls. Superfusion of the mesentery with filter-sterilized PD fluid had no significant effects on leukocyte rolling or flow velocity in venules 25-40 microns in diameter compared with buffer superfusion. Heat-sterilized PD fluid decreased the concentration of rolling leukocytes and increased flow velocity significantly, as compared with buffer and filter-sterilized PD fluid. The results indicate that heat sterilization of PD fluids produces substances that interact with microvascular tone and leukocyte-endothelial adhesion, which hypothetically could impair the acute, granulocyte-mediated defense against bacterial infections.







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