Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
12400570_1038331769571335_3817628148472014561_n
Kidney patient Fabian Cornelissen, the face of the Dutch Kidney Foundation's worldwide campaign for a portable artificial kidney (Photo: Dutch Kidney Foundation/Facebook) - Credit: Kidney patient Fabian Cornelissen, the face of the Dutch Kidney Foundation's worldwide campaign for a portable artificial kidney (Photo: Dutch Kidney Foundation/Facebook)
Health
dialysis
Dutch Kidney Foundation
Fabian Cornelissen
fundraising campaign
portable artificial kidney
Tom Oostrom
Tuesday, 2 February 2016 - 10:42

Share this article:

Amsterdam man leads push to develop portable artificial kidney

Amsterdam man Fabian Cornelissen is the face of a world wide campaign, launched by the Dutch Kidney foundation on Monday, aimed at developing the first portable artificial kidney. The aim of the campaign, called Help Them Escape, is to raise the 10 million euros needed to build such a portable artificial kidney and to help give kidney patients dependent on dialyses get their freedom back. The foundation has been working on the development of a portable artificial kidney for several years, along with universities and companies. The device will perform the same function as dialyses, but is the size of a shoe box and can thus be easily fitted into a car or plane, Het Parool reports. There is already much knowledge and technology available, but building a prototype costs a lot of money. Hence the worldwide fundraising campaign. The Dutch Kidney Foundation chose to jump into action because the pharmaceutical companies are not investing in improving dialysis. "We could have chosen to fund research in the hope that the treatment would some day improve. We chose to take action", Tom Oostrom, director of the Kidney Foundation, said to the newspaper. Since the first artificial kidney was developed in 1943, the medical profession has taken huge leaps, but the dialysis technique and outlook for kidney patients is still about the same, according to Oostrom. A portable artificial kidney would dramatically improve the lives of 2.5 million dialysis patients worldwide, some 6,500 of them Dutch, who can not survive a week without undergoing dialysis. The main innovation of the portable artificial kidney is in the reuse of dialysis fluid. A dialysis machine uses between 60 to 100 liters of fluid to flush a patient's blood. The portable version will have to get by with 5 liters. The Kidney Foundation aims to have a prototype ready in 2018. 36 year old Amsterdam kidney patient Fabian Cornelissen is the face of this campaign. He was diagnosed with a hereditary kidney disease at age 25. After going to the Amsterdam Medical Center for dialysis three times a week for many years, he finally decided to have a dialysis machine installed in his home. "Yes, I can go on vacation, but we have to plan it a year in advance and it can only be near a big city, so I can undergo dialysis in the hospital."

More like this

Image
Chalk drawing of human kidneys and medical term kidney donor. Concept of learning medicine
12 Dutch patients missed out on potential kidney transplant due to a software error
Image
The Reichsschenke Zum Ritter Götz in Kroev, Germany, before its collapse on 6 August 2024
€50,000 raised for Urk family after collapse of German hotel
Image
An acrobat during a circus performance.
Circus robbed during performance, robbers throw clothes on sleeping baby during break-in
Image
Rotterdam police search for two missing men after a canine unit picked up a scent in the rubble from a building explosion on Schammenkamp. 1 February 2024
Crowdfunding campaign raises over €17,000 for victims of Rotterdam-Zuid apartment explosion
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Dutch government prepares new household aid amid elevated inflation, fuel costs
  • A'dam journalist’s son attacked with bike chain lock after story about football violence
  • Dutch health insurance to cover gastric reduction surgery for some teens with obesity
  • Italy agrees to start taking asylum seekers back from the Netherlands from next week
  • Dutch companies imported €2 billion worth of dangerous designer drugs from India

Top stories

  • Dutch companies imported €2 billion worth of dangerous designer drugs from India
  • Rate of birth complications higher in poorer neighborhoods
  • At least 8 Dutch men suspected of drugging, raping, filming their wives, girlfriends
  • Court rules Ye can remain in Netherlands for Arnhem performances this week
  • New A'dam coalition planning parking +tourist tax hike, free public transport for kids

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content