Sanders P W, Taylor H, Curtis J J
Am J Kidney Dis. 1985 Jan;5(1):32-5. doi: 10.1016/s0272-6386(85)80132-3.
Heparin is usually employed as an anticoagulant during routine hemodialysis. In patients at high risk of bleeding, however, use of heparin significantly increases their morbidity and, presumably, mortality. Over 1 year, we performed 156 hemodialysis procedures successfully without heparin in the transplant dialysis unit. Twenty-eight patients were included in the study; 23 patients had received renal transplants and five patients were in the mouth dental extraction, and parathyroidectomy). Only one of these patients had a coagulopathy. No dialysis procedure produced or aggravated bleeding. Conversely, a coagulopathy was not induced or worsened by dialysis without heparin. A significant complication, defined as complete clotting of the artificial kidney with or without clotting in the lines, occurred in eight dialyses (5.13% of the total) and resulted in an average blood loss of 150 ml. Partial clotting of the dialyzer did not interrupt the procedure and occurred nine times (5.8% of the total). These results compare favorably with previously documented complications from low-dose and regional heparin.