Reserve zirconium phosphate module for use in sorbent dialysis
US-2015367057-A1 · Dec 24, 2015 · US
US9682184B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-9682184-B2 |
| Application number | US-201214361045-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Dec 27, 2012 |
| Priority date | Dec 29, 2011 |
| Publication date | Jun 20, 2017 |
| Grant date | Jun 20, 2017 |
A practical reading order for non-experts. Skip the full description unless you need deep technical detail.
What the patent document calls the invention.
A short plain-language summary of the technical disclosure.
Who owns or filed the patent and who is credited as inventor.
Filing, priority, publication, and grant dates set the timeline.
The legal scope of protection — read this for what is actually claimed.
Technology tags used to group this patent with similar filings.
Prior art links and similar publications in this corpus.
Official abstract text for this publication.
A sorbent dialysis cartridge is provided for removal of uremic toxins from dialysate wherein the sorbent cartridges can use non-enzymatic urea-binding materials in place of urease. The cartridge can have a first sorbent layer loaded with a polymerizable urea complexing agent and a second sorbent layer loaded with a crosslinker. The crosslinker can be crosslinkable with a soluble urea complex reaction product of the polymerizable urea complexing agent and urea when passing through the first sorbent layer to form a crosslinked polymeric urea complex which is attachable to the second sorbent layer. In another option, a sorbent layer can be used which has an insolubilized crosslinked polymeric urea-bindable complex attached thereto, wherein the crosslinked polymeric urea-bindable complex can be a reaction product of a crosslinker and polymerizable urea complexing agent. Methods and sorbent dialysis systems using the cartridge, and methods of making the sorbent material, are provided.
Opening claim text (preview).
What is claimed is: 1. A sorbent cartridge comprising sorbent which comprises at least one first sorbent layer loaded with at least one polymerizable urea complexing agent and at least one second sorbent layer loaded with at least one crosslinker wherein said crosslinker comprises zirconium, and wherein the zirconium being crosslinkable with a soluble urea complex reaction product of said polymerizable urea complexing agent and urea when passing through the first sorbent layer, to form a crosslinked polymeric urea complex which is attachable to said second sorbent layer. 2. The sorbent cartridge of claim 1 , wherein the sorbent cartridge is free of an immobilized urease layer. 3. The sorbent cartridge of claim 1 , wherein total content of active urease in the cartridge is less than about 5 wt %, based on total immobilized weight portion of cartridge contents. 4. The sorbent cartridge of claim 1 , further comprising dialysate fluid at a pH of about 2 or less, which communicates with the sorbent. 5. The sorbent cartridge of claim 1 , wherein the complexing agent comprises dialdehyde, dicarboxylic acid, monocarboxylic acid, starch, starch phosphate, orthophosphoric acid, or any combinations thereof. 6. The sorbent cartridge of claim 1 , wherein said first sorbent layer is a hydrous zirconium oxide (HZO) layer, an activated carbon layer, a zirconium phosphate (ZrP) layer, or any combinations thereof. 7. The sorbent cartridge of claim 1 , wherein said second sorbent layer comprises zirconium phosphate (ZrP) layer. 8. The sorbent cartridge of claim 7 , wherein said second sorbent layer is an acidic zirconium phosphate (AZrP) layer, and an alkaline hydrous zirconium oxide layer is further included in the sorbent cartridge on a side of the AZrP layer opposite to said first sorbent layer. 9. The sorbent cartridge of claim 7 , having a urea-N capacity of greater than about 18 g urea-N/Kg ZrP. 10. A method to regenerate or purify spent dialysate comprising passing the spent dialysate through the sorbent cartridge of claim 1 . 11. A method of preparing purified fresh dialysate for dialysis comprising passing the dialysate through the sorbent cartridge of claim 1 . 12. The method of claim 11 , wherein the dialysate comprises tap water. 13. A method of regenerating or purifying spent dialysate by a process comprising: (i) passing urea-containing dialysate through a first sorbent layer loaded with a polymerizable urea complexing agent to form a soluble urea complex at a pH of about 2 or less, (ii) passing said soluble urea complex through a second sorbent layer loaded with a crosslinker which crosslinks with the soluble urea complex to form a crosslinked polymeric urea complex which is attached to said second sorbent layer, wherein said crosslinker comprises zirconium ions. 14. The method of claim 13 , wherein said regenerating or purifying is in the absence of a urease layer. 15. The method of claim 13 , further comprising neutralizing the pH of the dialysate after passing through the second sorbent layer. 16. An apparatus for conducting dialysis comprising the sorbent cartridge of claim 1 , and a dialyzer in fluid communication with the sorbent cartridge, wherein spent dialysate passes from the dialyzer to and through the sorbent cartridge. 17. The apparatus of claim 16 , wherein the spent dialysate is spent hemodialysate, spent peritoneal dialysate, or combinations thereof. 18. The apparatus of claim 16 , wherein the dialyzer is in fluid communication with the blood of a patient. 19. A dialysis system comprising the sorbent cartridge of claim 1 and a source of spent dialysate, wherein the source of the spent dialysate is in fluid communication with the sorbent cartridge and the spent dialysate passes to and through the sorbent cartridge.
containing metals, e.g. organo-metallic compounds, coordination complexes · CPC title
Compounds of Ti, Zr, Hf · CPC title
comprising free carbon; comprising carbon obtained by carbonising processes · CPC title
with dialysate regeneration · CPC title
comprising oxides or hydroxides of metals not provided for in group B01J20/04 · CPC title
Related publications grouped by family.
Answers are generated from the same data shown on this page.