Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is a major public health problem worldwide, with a significant increase in the number of patients treated with dialysis and renal transplantation. Hemodialysis (HD) is the most widely used dialysis therapy in the world, and adequate vascular access is required. The central venous catheter (CVC), although not considered the ideal vascular access, is still widely used. Its use has a strong relation with access-related infection, whether it is an exit orifice (IES), a tunnel and the most severe, the bloodstream (BSI). Consequently CVC contributes to patients' morbidity and mortality in HD, as well as to the high cost of hemodialysis treatment. To compare the use of 0.1% topical gentamicin with the use of placebo in the exit site (ES) of tunneled catheters in patients in chronic HD regarding the reduction in IES and BSI rates and to identify the induction of bacterial resistance to gentamicin.
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Rates of exit-site infection
Timeframe: 1 years
Rates of catheter-related bloodstream infections
Timeframe: 1 years