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PD effluent specimen collection: your questions answered

Figueiredo, A; Bowes, E; Chow, J; Hurst, HE; Neumann, J; Walker, R; Brunier, G

PD effluent specimen collection: your questions answered Thumbnail


Authors

A Figueiredo

E Bowes

J Chow

J Neumann

R Walker

G Brunier



Abstract

When a patient on peritoneal dialysis (PD) presents with suspected PD-related peritonitis (e.g. cloudy PD fluid and abdominal pain), one of the most important initial aspects of management is for the nephrology nurse/home dialysis nurse to collect PD effluent specimens for white blood cells count, Gram stain, culture and sensitivity for inspection and to send for laboratory testing before antibiotics are started. A review by seven members of the International Society for Peritoneal Dialysis (ISPD) Nursing Committee of all 133 questions posted to the ISPD website ‘Questions about PD’ over the last 4 years (January 2018–December 2021), revealed 97 posted by nephrology nurses from around the world. Of these 97 questions, 10 were noted to be related to best practices for PD effluent specimen collection. For our review, we focused on these 10 questions along with their responses by the members of the ISPD ‘Ask The Experts Team’, whereby existing best practice recommendations were considered, if available, relevant literature was cited and differences in international practice discussed. We revised the original responses for clarity and updated the references. We found that these 10 questions were quite varied but could be organised into four categories: how to collect PD effluent safely; how to proceed with PD effluent collection; how to collect PD effluent for assessment; and how to proceed with follow-up PD effluent collection after intraperitoneal antibiotics have been started. In general, we found that there was limited evidence in the PD literature to answer several of these 10 questions posted to the ISPD website ‘Questions about PD’ by nephrology nurses from around the world on this important clinical topic of best practices for PD effluent specimen collection. Some of these questions were also not addressed in the latest ISPD Peritonitis Guidelines. Moreover, when polling members of our ISPD Nursing Committee we found when answering a few of these questions, nursing practice varied within and among countries. We encourage PD nurses to conduct their own research on this important topic, focusing on areas where research evidence is lacking.

Citation

Figueiredo, A., Bowes, E., Chow, J., Hurst, H., Neumann, J., Walker, R., & Brunier, G. (2022). PD effluent specimen collection: your questions answered. Peritoneal dialysis international, https://doi.org/10.1177/08968608221136389

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Oct 11, 2022
Online Publication Date Dec 7, 2022
Publication Date Dec 7, 2022
Deposit Date Feb 13, 2023
Publicly Available Date Feb 13, 2023
Journal Peritoneal Dialysis International: Journal of the International Society for Peritoneal Dialysis
Print ISSN 0896-8608
Electronic ISSN 1718-4304
Publisher SAGE Publications
DOI https://doi.org/10.1177/08968608221136389
Publisher URL https://doi.org/10.1177/08968608221136389
Additional Information Additional Information : Figueiredo AE, Bowes E, Chow JSF, et al. PD effluent specimen collection: Your questions answered. Peritoneal Dialysis International. 2022;0(0). doi:10.1177/08968608221136389

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