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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Quality of water used for haemodialysis: bacteriological and chemical parameters.

TLDR
A sufficient chemical water purification treatment system should consist of ion exchange and reverse osmosis and attention has to be paid to the suitability of materials in contact with the water and of the chemicals used, for example regenerants or corrosion inhibitors.
Abstract
BACKGROUND The bacterial and chemical contamination of dialysate fluids are important problems in haemodialysis therapy and may be caused by the water used for dialysate preparation. METHODS We performed a survey of the microbiological and chemical quality of the water used in seven dialysis wards. Special attention was paid to the effects of each water treatment step, for example ion exchange, reverse osmosis and UV disinfection, on the number of bacteria (measured as colony forming units, CFU), the amount of endotoxin (endotoxin units, EU) and various chemical parameters, the main focus being on calcium, magnesium, sulphate, aluminium and heavy metals. RESULTS CFU values exceeding the European Pharmacopeia value, determined at an incubation temperature of 22 degrees C, were found in the samples of raw water (20.0%, n=25), after ion exchange (66.7%, n=12), after reverse osmosis (33.3%, n=18) and also in samples of the dialysis water taken at the inlets (12.5%, n=40) and outlets (50.0%, n=18) of the machines. Whereas all raw water samples from the wards showed high mean values for endotoxin (0.56-9.10 EU/ml) and the endotoxin levels were often enhanced after ion exchange (0.13- >9.49 EU/ml), treatment by reverse osmosis led to a satisfactory decrease in endotoxin in all samples (<0.03 EU/ml). Sufficient reductions in calcium, magnesium and sulphate could only be achieved by the combined application of ion exchange and reverse osmosis. Mercury contamination was observed in the samples after ion exchange at three treatment plants, this was possibly caused by polluted regenerants. Increased amounts of aluminium, copper and zinc were found in water samples from different sites in the treatment systems and were caused by materials in contact with the water. CONCLUSIONS A sufficient chemical water purification treatment system should consist of ion exchange and reverse osmosis. Attention has to be paid to the suitability of materials in contact with the water and of the chemicals used, for example regenerants or corrosion inhibitors. From the microbiological point of view, a safety UV disinfection step in the water-treatment system is favourable. To avoid bacterial recontamination periodic cleaning and disinfecting of the water-treatment and distribution systems, as well as the dialysis machine are essential. There is the need for complete guidelines regarding dialysis water that include all relevant chemical and microbiological parameters. Based on this standard, periodic examination of the water after each treatment step has to be performed.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

A native to amyloidogenic transition regulated by a backbone trigger.

TL;DR: The conformational changes that initiate fiber formation by β-2-microglobulin (β2m) in dialysis-related amyloidosis are reported, and a β2m variant is designed that closely adopts this intermediate state and has kinetic, thermodynamic and catalytic properties consistent with its being a fibrillogenic intermediate of wild-type β 2m.
Journal ArticleDOI

Kidney dialysis-associated amyloidosis: a molecular role for copper in fiber formation.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present evidence for a novel interaction between β2m and Cu2+ at a concentration within institutionally recommended limits for this metal ion in dialysate solution.
Journal ArticleDOI

Oligomeric Assembly of Native-like Precursors Precedes Amyloid Formation by β-2 Microglobulin†

TL;DR: Comparisons of the structural and oligomeric changes in beta2m at time points preceding fibrillogenesis suggest that Cu(2+) acts as an initiating factor of amyloidosis by inducing oligomer formation.
BookDOI

Protein aggregation and fibrillogenesis in cerebral and systemic amyloid disease

J. R. Harris
TL;DR: This work describes the development of fibrillogenesis and neurotoxicity by amyloid-beta (Abeta) and other disease-related peptides/proteins by plant extracts and herbal compounds and models the Polyglutamine Aggregation Pathway in Huntington's Disease from Basic Studies to Clinical Applications.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Microbial and endotoxin contamination in water and dialysate in the central United States.

TL;DR: There was no correlation observed between the type of water purification system or the frequency of disinfection of the system and the bacterial and endotoxin contamination levels, and it is recommended that more sensitive culturing methods be used to provide adequate bacterial monitoring of dialysate center water supplies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quality of hemodialysis water: A 7-year multicenter study

TL;DR: The performance of different types of water treatments were compared and discussed; the best overall compliance was obtained by reverse osmosis combined with deionization (RO + DI), the type of water treatment that proved most popular was RO alone, which was used by 22 HD centers (61%).
Journal ArticleDOI

Biodosimetry: Model calculations for u.v. water disinfection devices with regard to dose distributions

TL;DR: By calculations and by experiments the influences on the test results obtained by this method of deducing the dose (reduction-equivalent dose or RED) which is deduced from the survival rate of the microorganisms passing flow-through systems for u.v. wastewater or drinking water in general are investigated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evaluation of the Efficiency of a UV Plant for Drinking Water Disinfection

TL;DR: In this paper, B. subtilis (ATCC 6633) spores were suspended in potable water and irradiated in a commercially available drinking water UV plant with varying flows (0.5 to 7.5 m3/h) and transmission (3 to 80 %; thickness 10 cm).
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