Gambro, with about $1.6 billion in sales last year, provides equipment for haemodialysis.
From the economist.com
If I was on haemodialysis what would happen with my employment.
From the guardian.co.uk
Sister Gill Dutton, the lead nurse on the Manchester Royal Infirmary's home haemodialysis programme.
From the guardian.co.uk
Three-quarters of those on dialysis are on haemodialysis.
From the guardian.co.uk
Ms. Hwang Ming Lan, senior nurse manager has been working for 10 years in Sunway Medical center's haemodialysis unit.
From the theepochtimes.com
These organs can be transplanted into recipients with limited life-expectancy on haemodialysis after careful removal of the renal mass.
From the sciencedaily.com
Eventually their combined expertise may improve dialysis products, possibly moving haemodialysis from the clinic to the home.
From the economist.com
Illnesses and deaths of haemodialysis patients, probably resulting from blue-green algal toxins in inadequately-treated water, occurred in Brazil in 1996.
From the guardian.co.uk
He said it decided to change its strategy because although hospital haemodialysis is widely used, it is extremely expensive and it became clear to him that it was unsustainable in today's NHS.
From the guardian.co.uk
More examples
Hemodialysis: dialysis of the blood to remove toxic substances or metabolic wastes from the bloodstream; used in the case of kidney failure
In medicine, hemodialysis (also haemodialysis) is a method for removing waste products such as creatinine and urea, as well as free water from the blood when the kidneys are in renal failure. ...
A form of dialysis in which the blood is cleaned outside the body by a machine which passes the blood across a filter.
Removal of excess fluids and waste products by passage of blood through an artificial kidney.
One of the two main varieties of artificial kidney treatment (the other is 'peritoneal dialysis'). These will be explained in more detail within the text as you move through this web site.
An artificial way of cleaning the blood, usually carried out by the kidneys
A medical procedure that uses a special machine (a dialysis machine) to filter waste products from the blood and to restore normal constituents to it. ...
A technique of removing waste materials or poisons from the blood using the principle of dialysis. Haemodialysis is performed on patients whose kidneys have ceased to function; the process takes place in an artificial kidney, or dialyser. ...
One type of dialysis treatment. May be abbreviated to HD. See also information on haemodialysis itself.