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Apex Nursing

Reference — Critical Care

CRRT Reference

Quick-access CRRT reference for ICU nurses — modalities, anticoagulation, monitoring intervals, fluid balance, and alarm response.

Educational use only. CRRT prescriptions, anticoagulation, and circuit management are provider- and protocol-driven; this overview supports concept review only. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

CRRT Modalities at a Glance

FeatureCVVHCVVHDCVVHDF
MechanismConvection onlyDiffusion onlyConvection + Diffusion
DialysateNoYesYes
Replacement FluidYesNoYes
Small Molecule ClearanceModerateHighHigh
Middle Molecule ClearanceHighLowHigh
Best ForFluid removal; cytokinesUremia; hyperkalemiaGeneral ICU AKI (most common)

Anticoagulation Quick Reference

AgentMonitoring ParameterTargetUse When
Heparin (systemic)aPTT45–60 seconds (or per protocol)Standard first-line; no HIT; acceptable bleeding risk
Regional CitrateIonized Ca²⁺ (circuit + systemic)Circuit iCa: 0.25–0.35 mmol/L; Systemic iCa: 1.12–1.35 mmol/LHigh bleeding risk; preferred for prolonged filter life; requires Ca²⁺ replacement
ArgatrobanaPTT or ACT per protocol1.5–3× baseline aPTTConfirmed or suspected HIT (heparin-induced thrombocytopenia)
No anticoagulationVisual circuit inspection; circuit pressuresTMP < threshold; no visible clotUnacceptably high bleeding risk (recent surgery, active hemorrhage)

Nursing Monitoring Intervals

ParameterFrequencyClinical Significance
Circuit pressures (access, return, TMP)Continuous (alarm-monitored)Rising TMP = filter clotting; falling access pressure = catheter kink/positional
Fluid balance / net UFHourlyCumulative balance must match prescribed net removal goal
Blood pressure / MAPContinuous (art-line) or q15–30 minHypotension = too aggressive net removal; reduce UF rate and notify provider
TemperatureEvery 1–2 hoursCRRT causes blood cooling; hypothermia common without active warming
Potassium (K⁺)Every 4–6 hoursCRRT clears K⁺ efficiently; hypokalemia is a common complication
Ionized Calcium (iCa)Every 1–2 hours (citrate protocol)Low systemic iCa = citrate toxicity or insufficient replacement; hypocalcemia risk
PhosphorusEvery 6–12 hoursCRRT clears phosphorus; hypophosphatemia can cause weakness, respiratory failure
MagnesiumEvery 6–12 hoursCleared by CRRT; hypomagnesemia may cause dysrhythmias and neuromuscular signs

Common CRRT Alarms and Actions

AlarmCommon CauseNursing Action
High TMPFilter clotting from inadequate anticoagulationCheck anticoagulation levels; notify provider; prepare for filter change
Low access pressureCatheter kink, patient position, hypotensionReposition patient/catheter; check for kinking; assess BP
High return pressureCircuit kink, clot in return lineInspect return tubing; check for clot; notify RT/provider
Air detector alarmAir in circuitImmediately clamp circuit; do NOT return blood until air cleared; call provider
Blood leakFilter membrane ruptureClamp circuit; do not return blood to patient; change circuit; notify provider
Low flow / high pressure differentialCatheter dysfunction or clotFlush catheter per protocol; reposition; consider catheter exchange

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 20, 2026

This page is written to align with Society of Critical Care Medicine (SCCM) · Surviving Sepsis Campaign · American Association of Critical-Care Nurses (AACN). It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →