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Karger Publishers, Kidney and Blood Pressure Research, 3(33), p. 181-185, 2010

DOI: 10.1159/000316702

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Low-Flow Polytetrafluoroethylene Accesses: Ultrasound Surveillance and Preemptive Interventions Ensure Long-Term Patency

This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

<i>Background:</i> Vascular accesses (especially polytetrafluoroethylene grafts) with a permanently low flow (Qa <600 ml/min) are prone to thrombosis and thus have short patency. The reason for a permanently low flow is usually medial calcinosis of the inflow artery in diabetics. We retrospectively studied the long-term patency of low-flow grafts with careful ultrasound surveillance and preemptive interventions. <i>Methods:</i> Twenty subjects with Qa permanently <600 ml/min were included. Ultrasound surveillance was performed every 3 months in addition to classical monitoring techniques. Significant stenosis was strictly defined as the combination of B-mode narrowing >50% + >2-fold peak systolic velocity increase + 1 additional criterion (residual diameter <2.0 mm or flow volume decrease by >20%). Such stenoses were treated by preemptive percutaneous intervention. Primary and secondary patencies were calculated. <i>Results:</i> The primary patency was 357 ± 316 days and the secondary (cumulative) patency was 996 ± 702 days. The number of interventions was 2.09/patient year, but >10 in 6 (33%) subjects. 93 and 80% of grafts were patent 1 and 2 years after access creation, respectively. <i>Conclusion:</i> Low-flow accesses undergoing ultrasound surveillance with strict diagnostic criteria and preemptive interventions had patencies similar to accesses with normal Qa in our study. This was enabled by a relatively high rate of interventions.