Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

Introduction: For decades, the diameters of the blood vessels have occupied an essential place in predicting AV fistula maturation. However, in addition to absolute vein diameters, vein distensibility has recently been correlated with AVF outcome.

Objectives: We assumed intraoperative measured vein distensibility using the saline solution can successfully predict fistula maturation.

Patients And Methods: This study included 120 patients with native radiocephalic or brachiocephalic fistulas. Intraoperatively, the diameter of the blood vessels was measured. Consequently, we cut the vein, dilated it with a solution, and then measured it again. Distensibility was calculated as both absolute and relative values. The distance of palpable thrill from anastomosis was also measured. Two months after surgery, a Doppler examination was performed to assess fistula maturation.

Results: Cumulative maturation was 75.8% and was not significantly different between radio and brachiocephalic fistula. In brachiocephalic fistulas, a difference was found in the diameter of the vein (3.24 mm vs 2.61 mm) and the diameter of a dilated vein (4.69 mm vs 3.89 mm). In radiocephalic fistulas, a difference was in the following parameters: Artery (2.7 mm vs 2.4 mm), Dilated vein (3.93 mm vs 3.15 mm), Adis (1.73 mm vs 1.13 mm), Rdis (1.89 vs 1.59), and Thrill (14.2 cm vs 11.6 cm). The ROC curve analysis identified threshold values  that predict successful fistula maturation. For RC AVF, it was (Artery 2.45 mm, Dilated vein 3.45 mm, Adis 1.25 mm, Rdis 1.65, and Thrill 14.5 cm), and for BC AVF, it was (Vein 2.85 mm, and Dilated vein 4.25 mm).

Conclusion: Intraoperative vein distensibility and thrill can be used to predict the maturation of radiocephalic fistulas. In brachiocephalic fistulas, vein distensibility has no predictive value. The only two intraoperative parameters for predicting brachiocephalic fistula maturation were the vein diameter before and after dilatation.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/11297298251357637DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

fistula maturation
16
vein distensibility
16
dilated vein
16
vein
13
brachiocephalic fistulas
12
blood vessels
8
brachiocephalic fistula
8
fistulas difference
8
radiocephalic fistulas
8
fistula
7

Similar Publications

Objective: Failure of arteriovenous fistula (AVF) maturation results in unnecessary patient risk and resource waste. We sought to identify potentially addressable risk factors for fistula failure-to-mature (FTM) to cannulation readiness.

Methods: We conducted a single-institution retrospective review of patients undergoing primary AVF creation from 2015-2021.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: Minimal Invasive Dialysis Access (MIDA) for renal dialysis encompasses percutaneous arteriovenous fistula (pAVF) creation and the modified percutaneous Seldinger peritoneal dialysis catheter insertions (pPD). This review examines the impact of MIDA on technical success, maturation rates, patency, clinical benefits, complications, and cost.

Methods: A review was made of the literature on MIDA including pAVF creation and pPD insertion regarding technical success rates, maturation rates, patency, clinical benefits, complications, and cost.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

For many years, the vascular access guidelines recommended placement of arteriovenous fistulas (AVFs) in preference to arteriovenous grafts (AVGs) because AVFs had superior long-term patency, required fewer interventions to maintain patency, and were associated with lower costs of vascular access management. However, subsequent research has questioned the "Fistula First strategy" (placing an AVF whenever the vascular anatomy is suitable). First, AVF non-maturation is substantial (30-40%), and even higher among women, older patients and those with peripheral vascular disease.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objectives: As a two-dimensional modality, venography has limitations in its capacity to measure lumen caliber and to assess stenotic disease accurately. This has implications in the management of end-stage renal-disease (ESRD) patients "no-option" candidates access for arteriovenous fistula (AVF) or graft (AVG) creation secondary to high risk of vascular access failure. The incremental diagnostic and clinical impact of intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) was quantified in this tunneled dialysis catheter dependent ESRD cohort.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Predialysis Nephrology Care Disparities and Incident Vascular Access Among Hispanic Individuals.

JAMA Netw Open

September 2025

Division of Nephrology, Hypertension, and Transplantation, Department of Medicine, University of Florida, Gainesville.

Importance: Predialysis nephrology care is associated with the likelihood of having a mature, usable arteriovenous access for starting hemodialysis (ie, incident vascular access), a key care quality metric for patients with kidney failure. However, the magnitude of this association has not been quantified to date.

Objective: To quantify the attributable association between lack of access to predialysis nephrology care and incident vascular access outcomes among Hispanic patients.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF