Movie Trailers Illustrating My NAD Deficiencies


Tell a friend:


Lactic acidosis accompanied by acute renal failure in the newborn period was studied in two infants with circulatory insufficiency and hypoxia. Peritoneal dialysis was necessitated by anuria and serum potassium concentrations of 12.0 and 8.9 mEq/1.

Plasma lactate concentration was 35 and 50 mM/1 and blood pH 7.23 and 7.18, respectively, at the time dialysis was instituted. Because of the uncontrollable anaerobic metabolism in these two patients, and the attendant inability to metabolize lactate, the use of commercial lactate-containing dialysates as a source of base was shown to be ineffective in correcting the acidosis and hypothesized to cause a worsening of metabolic acidosis due to a loss of bicarbonate from extracellular fluid into dialysate.

Stabilization or improvement in the metabolic acidosis occurred with the utilization of a dilaysate containing bicarbonate with a gradient favoring movement of bicarbonate into, and lactate out of, extracellular fluid.

About the Authors

Nash MA, Russo JC. (1977) Neonatal lactic acidosis and renal failure: the role of peritoneal dialysis. J Pediatr. 1977 Jul;91(1):101-5.

Comments


Dr_Abram_Hoffer

  • Posted on 05/13/2010 02:08 am
This new work with NAD Therapy is very exciting and I think is right on target. It is indeed an energy-metabolic-deficiency (EMD) because in the absence of this coenzyme cycle almost all the reactions in the body run down... I congratulate Theo Verwey and his colleagues for this remarkable advance in using this concept and in using a simple test, the ratio of pyruvate to lactate as a diagnostic measure, to indicate the dose, duration of treatment etc.

<

|