Literature DB >> 11959724

Using pullback pressure measurements to identify venous stenoses persisting after successful angioplasty in failing hemodialysis grafts.

Brian Funaki1, Richard Kim, Jonathan Lorenz, Derek Fimmen, Thuong Van Ha, Jeffrey A Leef, Jordan D Rosenblum, Christopher Straus, George X Zaleski.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: We used pullback pressure measurements to identify venous stenoses persisting after angioplasty of failing hemodialysis grafts.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: Fifty angioplasty procedures were performed in 32 patients with elevated venous pressures at dialysis. Grafts were initially evaluated on digital subtraction angiography, and all stenoses measuring greater than 50% on angiography underwent angioplasty. In successful cases (residual stenosis < 30%), pullback pressure measurements were obtained from the superior vena cava to the graft to identify hemodynamically significant (> 10 mm Hg) stenoses. These lesions were then treated with repeated angioplasty.
RESULTS: Hemodynamically significant stenoses with a gradient range of 10-27 mm Hg (mean, 16 mm Hg) were found in nine (18%) of 50 procedures. All gradients occurred at sites of previous angioplasty. Repeated angioplasty of these stenoses performed with larger angioplasty balloons reduced gradients to less than 3 mm Hg in six stenoses and to 5 mm Hg in three stenoses. In this subgroup, primary patency was eight (89%) of nine stenoses at 1 month and 2 months and five (56%) of nine stenoses at 6 months. Using life table analysis, we found that primary patency of the entire population was 84% at 1 month, 66% at 2 months, and 47% at 6 months. The mean time between interventions was 6 months, and the thrombosis rate was 0.32 per year.
CONCLUSION: Pullback pressure measurements are a useful adjunct to angiography to evaluate the hemodynamic results of angioplasty in patients with failing hemodialysis grafts.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 11959724     DOI: 10.2214/ajr.178.5.1781161

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  AJR Am J Roentgenol        ISSN: 0361-803X            Impact factor:   3.959


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