11 When exposed to a solution containing more active monovalent and divalent cations – like potassium (K+), calcium (Ca++) or magnesium (Mg++) – it will preferentially release Na+ and H+ into solution and, in exchange, bind the other ions. In the early 1960s, NASA sought to purify waste water and human effluent to minimize water carriage in rocket payloads and to act as a renewable water source for manned space travel. Sorbents soon emerged as an ideal way to remove a wide range of human effluent waste substances from solution. They proved remarkably effective and efficient water purifiers. Sorbents were first adapted to the purification of blood by Reynolds, who used zirconium phosphate as an adsorbent to
remove ammonium from a test solution. check details Sorbent chemistry was soon applied to effluent dialysate from an artificial kidney circuit to test dialysate effluent reuse potentials. The REDY system – an acronym for REcirculation of DialYsate – then emerged.3,4 The REDY used a disposable, one-use sorbent cartridge. This contained activated
DZNeP clinical trial charcoal, urease and zirconium phosphate that, when used in series, purified the dialysate effluent and permitted dialysate regeneration. Only 6 L of tap water was required. This compared with as much as several hundred L/treatment (depending upon R/O plant efficiency) required by a conventional single pass system. Post-cartridge effluent water purity reached near ultra-pure quality despite the absence of a continuous water source. A drain was not needed. The only anchoring connection was a standard circuit power source. The serial REDY models of the 1970–1980s were the first truly portable dialysis systems and were widely used throughout Australian hospitals, especially for bedside dialysis in acute renal failure. Importantly, they were also deployed
in Australian homes for home-based haemodialysis. This was a likely factor at that time in the coincident success of Australian home haemodialysis. In both the REDY system and the more recent clinical prototype sorbent system, the Allient,12–14‘used’ or ‘effluent’ post-dialyser dialysate containing the usual solute products of dialysis passed through a multilayered column of adsorptive materials. These adsorbents were designed to trap Galeterone or ‘adsorb’ these solutes – and other substances including endotoxin and bacteria – and remove them from the dialysate. In addition, excess dialysed ions – K+, Ca++, Mg++ and phosphate (PO4≡) – were exchanged for benign or less toxic ions like Na+, H+, bicarbonate (HCO3-) and acetate.* The ‘reconstituted’ fluid emerged from the sorbent cartridge as ‘purified’ water containing Na+, HCO3- and a small amount of acetate. A final step was required – the re-addition of a known concentration of K+, Ca++, Mg++– to fully reconstitute the dialysate before its’ representation at the dialyser as an ‘infusate’. The entire sorbent process has been well described by Ash.