AV Shunt-ARI
AV Shunt-ARI
AV Shunt-ARI
Infection
Prevention of infection:
DIAGNOSIS:
Blood cultures
colony count four-fold higher in blood drawn from the catheter
compared to the peripheral specimen had a sensitivity of 94 percent,
a specificity of 100 percent,
A single bacterial count of >100 cfu/mL from catheter cultures with
an identical organism growing from the peripheral blood specimen
it is common to occur in the absence of evidence of an exit-site
infection
Double Lumen Catheter Complications
Treatment of infection:
Catheter removal
All non-cuffed catheters should be removed in the presence of bacteremia
if follow-up blood cultures remain positive for more than five days despite
appropriate antimicrobial therapy
signs of accompanying exit-site or tunnel infection (erythema or pus at exit-
site)
infection with Candida or an infected clot.
An infected clot should be suspected if infusing or drawing blood through the
line is difficult or associated with rigors.
the patient becomes hemodynamically unstable or if the fever persists or
cultures remain positive after two to four days.
Patients who remain febrile or have positive cultures after the catheter is
removed should undergo a thorough examination for metastatic
complications (such as endocarditis and vertebral osteomyelitis)
Double Lumen Catheter Complications
Recommendations:
Patency/secondary failure
In native fistulas the risk of secondary failure is
low.
The 5-year and 10–year cumulative patencies
for radiocephalic fistulas are reported to be 53
and 45 percent, respectively
cumulative patency for PTFE grafts at one, two,
and four years is approximately 67, 50 and 43
percent, respectively
Comparison of Fistulas and Grafts
Complications: grafts vs. AVF
Thrombosis: 3.8 times
Infection: 10%,2%
Steal syndrome: 5% in both
Aneurysms: 5%, 3%
venous hypertension: 3% in both
seromas
heart failure: less than 1% in AVF
local bleeding
Thrombosis, infection, and seromas occur more frequently
with grafts than with fistulas
Complication: Steal syndrome
Symptoms and signs:
Mild:
Coldness, numbness, paresthesias,pain during dialysis, with
retained pulses
Severe(Indication for ischemia correction):
Constant pain, severe numbness,a nonhealing ischemic
fissure,digital cyanosis or gangrene,finger contracture
Mild symptoms and signs usually improve over a period of weeks
with the development of collateral blood flow.
Careful, frequent observations and an alert nursing staff are required
in this setting
Aneurysm and Pseudoaneurysm