Catheter-based intraaccess blood flow measurement as a problem-solving tool in hemodialysis access intervention.

PURPOSE To investigate retrospectively the use of catheter-based intraaccess blood flow measurements as an adjunct to physical examination and fistulography in hemodialysis access interventions. MATERIALS AND METHODS Among 1,540 dialysis interventions performed at a single institution in a 2.5-year period, 104 qualifying catheter-based flow measurements were made in 70 mature native fistula interventions in 55 patients and 34 graft interventions in 31 patients. The flow rate threshold prompting intervention was generally 600 mL/min, but some variation existed depending on the clinical setting. RESULTS The most common indication for measurement of blood flow was to determine the hemodynamic significance of a fistula inflow stenosis (n = 25), of which only four had subsequent intervention. Other common indications included decision-making resulting in further angioplasty or stent implantation of noninflow lesions (fistulas, n = 10; grafts, n = 23) versus termination of the procedure (n = 23), problem-solving in cases in which there was no visible lesion to explain the clinical indicator of access failure (n = 17), evaluation for high-flow-related cardiac risk in aneurysmal fistulas (n = 13), suboptimal evaluation of the inflow (n = 8), and suboptimal physical examination (n = 6). Overall, flow measurements supported a decision to perform angioplasty (n = 11) or stent placement (n = 3) in 17% of fistula interventions and 35% of graft interventions. CONCLUSIONS The major benefit of flow measurement was to support a decision to withhold further angioplasty or stent placement.

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