Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: DIANEAL LOW CALCIUM W DEXTROSE 1 5 IN PLASTIC CONTAINER versus DIANEAL LOW CALCIUM W DEXTROSE 4 25 IN PLASTIC CONTAINER.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: DIANEAL LOW CALCIUM W DEXTROSE 1 5 IN PLASTIC CONTAINER versus DIANEAL LOW CALCIUM W DEXTROSE 4 25 IN PLASTIC CONTAINER.
DIANEAL LOW CALCIUM W/DEXTROSE 1.5% IN PLASTIC CONTAINER vs DIANEAL LOW CALCIUM W/DEXTROSE 4.25% IN PLASTIC CONTAINER
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Dianeal Low Calcium with Dextrose 1.5% is a peritoneal dialysis solution that provides osmotic gradient for ultrafiltration and diffusion of solutes across the peritoneal membrane. Dextrose (1.5%) acts as the osmotic agent, creating a concentration gradient that drives water removal. The low calcium concentration (2.5 mEq/L) helps manage hypercalcemia in patients requiring calcium-based phosphate binders.
Sterile, nonpyrogenic, hyperosmotic solution containing dextrose as osmotic agent; creates osmotic gradient across peritoneal membrane to remove excess fluid and waste products via diffusion and ultrafiltration.
Intraperitoneal administration: 2 L per exchange, 4 exchanges per day (2.5 L per exchange for larger patients if tolerated).
Intraperitoneal administration: 2 liters per exchange, 4 exchanges daily, with dwell times of 4-6 hours; dextrose concentration adjusted to achieve ultrafiltration goals.
None Documented
None Documented
For intraperitoneal dextrose: not clinically applicable as elimination is via continuous peritoneal dialysis. Systemically absorbed dextrose has a half-life of 15-20 minutes due to rapid cellular uptake and metabolism.
Not applicable for intraperitoneal dextrose; systemic glucose half-life ~1.5-3 h in normal metabolic state. Peritoneal dialysis of dextrose reflects continuous absorption and metabolism.
Primarily removed via peritoneal dialysis itself; ~70% of absorbed glucose undergoes metabolism, with remaining glucose and lactate absorbed systemically and metabolized hepatically. Renal elimination of dextrose and lactate is negligible (<5%) due to low systemic absorption and endogenous metabolism.
Peritoneal elimination; glucose absorbed systemically is metabolized via glycolysis, with <5% excreted unchanged in urine. Dextrose removal relies on diffusion into dialysate; net ultrafiltrate exits via peritoneal catheter.
Category C
Category C
Peritoneal Dialysis Solution
Peritoneal Dialysis Solution