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      Increasing arteriovenous fistulas in hemodialysis patients: problems and solutions.

      1 ,
      Kidney international
      Wiley

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          Abstract

          National guidelines promote increasing the prevalence of fistula use among hemodialysis patients. The prevalence of fistulas among hemodialysis patients reflects both national, regional, and local practice differences as well as patient-specific demographic and clinical factors. Increasing fistula prevalence requires increasing fistula placement, improving maturation of new fistulas, and enhancing long-term patency of mature fistulas for dialysis. Whether a patient receives a fistula depends on several factors: timing of referral for dialysis and vascular access, type of fistula placed, patient demographics, preference of the nephrologist, surgeon, and dialysis nurses, and vascular anatomy of the patient. Whether the placed fistula is useable for dialysis depends on additional factors, including adequacy of vessels, surgeon's experience, patient demographics, nursing skills, minimal acceptable dialysis blood flow, and attempts to revise immature fistulas. Whether a mature fistula achieves long-term patency depends on the ability to prevent and correct thrombosis. An optimal outcome is likely when there is (1) a multidisciplinary team approach to vascular access; (2) consensus about the goals among all interested parties (nephrologists, surgeons, radiologists, dialysis nurses, and patients); (3) early referral for placement of vascular access; (4) restriction of vascular access procedures to surgeons with demonstrable interest and experience; (5) routine, preoperative mapping of the patient's arteries and veins; (6) close, ongoing communication among the involved parties; and (7) prospective tracking of outcomes with continuous quality assessment. Implementing these measures is likely to increase the prevalence of fistulas in any given dialysis unit. However, differences among dialysis units are likely to persist because of differences in gender, race, and co-morbidity mix of the patient population.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Kidney Int
          Kidney international
          Wiley
          0085-2538
          0085-2538
          Oct 2002
          : 62
          : 4
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Division of Nephrology, Department of Medicine, University of Alabama at Birmingham, 1900 University Boulevard, S. THT 647, Birmingham, AL 35294, USA. mallon@nrtc.uab.edu
          Article
          S0085-2538(15)48653-3
          10.1111/j.1523-1755.2002.kid551.x
          12234281
          1faab2c4-e875-4a9e-bbdd-28e22b50f002
          History

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