Pediatric nephrology : journal of the International Pediatric Nephrology Association
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Clinical Trial
Citrate clearance in children receiving continuous venovenous renal replacement therapy.
Anticoagulation is usually indicated in patients receiving continuous renal replacement therapy (CRRT) to prevent clotting of the extra-corporeal circuit. While heparin is the most frequently used anticoagulant, regional citrate anticoagulation is becoming the preferred choice in those patients at high risk for bleeding. However, it has been widely claimed that to avoid citrate toxicity, CRRT with citrate anticoagulation should utilize diffusive clearance (e.g., continuous venovenous hemodialysis). ⋯ Renal function recovered in all patients. We conclude that citrate anticoagulation in children is feasible, effective, and safe. Sufficient citrate clearance to prevent its toxic accumulation is achieved by convective clearance (CVVH) alone and diffusive clearance (CVVHDF) does not appear to be mandatory when utilizing citrate anticoagulation during CRRT.