| Literature DB >> 26716840 |
Leonard D Browne1, Khalid Bashar2, Philip Griffin1, Eamon G Kavanagh2, Stewart R Walsh2,3, Michael T Walsh1.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Non-maturation and post-maturation venous stenosis are the primary causes of failure within arteriovenous fistulae (AVFs). Although the exact mechanisms triggering failure remain unclear, abnormal hemodynamic profiles are thought to mediate vascular remodelling and can adversely impact on fistula patency. AIM: The review aims to clarify the role of shear stress on outward remodelling during maturation and evaluate the evidence supporting theories related to the localisation and development of intimal hyperplasia within AVFs.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26716840 PMCID: PMC4696682 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0145795
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Search string for PubMed which produces 131 results with a filter for publication date to 2015/01/01.
| Strategy | # | Search Terms |
|---|---|---|
| Population | #1 | (Vascular access[Title/Abstract] OR Arteriovenous fistul*[Title/Abstract] OR Arteriovenous Shunt[Title/Abstract] OR AVF[Title/Abstract] OR arteriovenous graft[Title/Abstract] OR anastomos*[Title/Abstract]) |
| Intervention | #2 | (CFD[Title/Abstract] OR computational fluid dynamics[Title/Abstract] OR numerical*[Title/Abstract] OR simulat*[Title/Abstract] OR in-situ[Title/Abstract] OR comput*[Title/Abstract] OR calcul*[Title/Abstract]) |
| Comparison | #3 | (hemodynamic*[Title/Abstract] OR shear stress[Title/Abstract] OR WSS[Title/Abstract] OR biomechanical forces[Title/Abstract] OR stress[Title/Abstract] OR mechanical[Title/Abstract]) |
| Outcomes | #4 | (intima media thickness[Title/Abstract] OR stenos*[Title/Abstract] OR intimal hyperplasia[Title/Abstract] OR smooth muscle cell migration[Title/Abstract] OR SMC remodelling[Title/Abstract] OR vascular remodelling[Title/Abstract] OR endothelial cell[Title/Abstract] OR vascular access dysfunction[Title/Abstract] OR MMP[Title/Abstract] OR maturation[Title/Abstract] OR patholog*[Title/Abstract] OR mature[Title/Abstract] OR IMT[Title/Abstract] OR IH[Title/Abstract] OR intima-media[Title/Abstract]) |
| #5 | NOT (coronary OR pulmonary OR catheter) | |
| #6 | #1 AND #2 AND #3 AND #4 AND #5 |
Acronyms: WSS = Wall Shear Stress, MMP = Matrix Metalloprotease, IH = intimal hyperplasia, IMT = Intima Media Thickening
Fig 1PRISMA diagram: Flow chart of the strategy used to select articles for review.
Reviewed articles in chronological order, with the affiliation of the corresponding author, species and AVF configuration.
| REF | Title | Year | Affiliation of Corresponding Author | Species | Fistula |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 8 | Measurement of hemodynamic and anatomic parameters in a swine arteriovenous fistula model | 2008 | University of Cincinnati | Porcine | Femoral artery and femoral vein AVF |
| 15 | Longitudinal assessment of hemodynamic endpoints in predicting arteriovenous fistula maturation | 2013 | University of Cincinnati | Porcine | Femoral artery and femoral vein AVF |
| 16 | Influence of temporal variation in wall shear stress on intima-media thickening in arteriovenous fistulae | 2012 | University of Cincinnati | Porcine | Femoral artery and femoral vein AVF |
| 17 | Vascular remodeling in autogenous arterio-venous fistulas by MRI and CFD | 2013 | University of California | Human | Brachiocephalic (n = 2) Brachiobasillic (n = 1) |
| 18 | Serial analysis of lumen geometry and hemodynamics in human arteriovenous fistula for hemodialysis using magnetic resonance imaging and computational fluid dynamics | 2012 | University of Utah | Human | Brachiocephalic |
| 19 | Hemodynamic wall shear stress profiles influence the magnitude and pattern of stenosis in a pig AV fistula | 2008 | University of Cincinnati | Porcine | Femoral artery and femoral vein AVF |
| 20 | Numerical and experimental study of blood flow through a patient-specific arteriovenous fistula used for hemodialysis | 2010 | Universite de Technologie de Compiegne | Human | Brachiocephalic |
| 21 | Investigations into the relationship between hemodynamics and vascular alterations in an established arteriovenous fistula | 2007 | Universite de Technologie de Compiegne | Human | Brachiocephalic |
| 22 | Incomplete restoration of homeostatic shear stress within arteriovenous fistulae | 2013 | University of Washington | Human | Radiocephalic (n = 2) Brachiocephalic(n = 2) |
| 23 | Wall shear stresses remain elevated in mature arteriovenous fistulas: a case study | 2011 | University of Limerick | Human | Radiocephalic AVF |
| 31 | Realistic temporal variations of shear stress modulate MMP-2 and MCP-1 expression in arteriovenous vascular access | 2009 | University of Limerick | Human | Radiocephalic |
| 32 | New Techniques for Determining the Longitudinal Effects of Local Hemodynamics on the Intima‐Media Thickness in Arteriovenous Fistulae in an Animal Model | 2013 | University of Cincinnati | Porcine | Femoral artery and femoral vein AVF |
| 41 | Transitional flow at the venous anastomosis of an arteriovenous graft: potential activation of the ERK1/2 mechanotransduction pathway | 2003 | The University of Illinois at Chicago | Canine | Femoral artery to Femoral vein graft |
| 52 | Numerical simulation of the fluid structure interactions in a compliant patient‐specific arteriovenous fistula | 2014 | Universite de Technologie de Compiegne | Human | Radiocephalic |
| 53 | Effects of wall distensibility in hemodynamic simulations of an arteriovenous fistula | 2013 | University of Washington | Human | Radiocephalic |
Fig 2A section of an artery wall shows the endothelial cells that form the inner lining and align longitudinally in the direction of the flow.
Pressure (P) acts normal to the vessel wall, which results in circumferential stretching of the vessel wall. Shear stress (τ) is parallel to the vessel wall and is exerted longitudinally in the direction of blood flow. The intima, media and adventitia layers of an artery and vein are shown. Vascular smooth muscle cells form the outer layers and align circumferentially. IMT refers to intima media thickness.
Fig 3Typical geometry of an arteriovenous fistula is shown with the swing segment highlighted; the dashed blue line highlights a cross section of the vein for which various vascular remodelling responses within the venous segment of an AVF are shown for a healthy vein and an ESRD vein.
Variation of experimental conditions and outcomes for AVF with curved configurations i.e. time of analysis, variation of flow rate, shear stress, lumen cross sectional area (CSA) and intima media thickness (IMT).
| Stage | Author | Methodology | Species & (location) | Time post formation | Flow rate | Shear stress level | CSA | IMT |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| <6 wks. | Rajabi-Jagahrgh et al [ | CT angiography Ultrasound CFD Histological analysis | Porcine (Femoral artery and vein) n = 3 | 2 days | - | - | - | - |
| 7 days | ↑ | ↓ | ↑ | ↑ | ||||
| 28 days | ↑ | ↓ | ↑ | ↑ | ||||
| Sigovan et al [ | Magnetic resonance angiogram CFD | Human (Brachiocephalic) n = 2 | 5 days | - | - | - | - | |
| 1 mo. | ↑ | ↓ | ↑ | X | ||||
| >6 wks. | 3 mo. | ↓ | ↓ | ↑ | X | |||
| He et al [ | Magnetic resonance angiogram CFD | Human (Brachiocephalic) n = 1 | 4 mo. | - | - | - | - | |
| 5 mo. | ↓ | ↓ | ↑ | X | ||||
| 7 mo. | ↓ | ↓ | ↑ | X |
X no data available; ↑ Increase; ↓ Decrease;—Initial time point of analysis
Variation of experimental outcomes for AVF with straight configurations.i.e. time of analysis, variation of flow rate, shear stress, lumen cross sectional area (CSA) and intima media thickness (IMT).
| Stage | Author | Methodology | Species & (location) | Time post formation | Flow rate | Shear stress level | CSA | IMT |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| <6 wks. | Rajabi-Jagahrgh et al [ | CT angiography Ultrasound CFD Histological analysis | Porcine (Femoral artery and vein) n = 3 | 2 days | - | - | - | - |
| 7 days | ↑ | ↑ | ↔ | ↑ | ||||
| 28 days | ↑ | ↑ | ↔ | ↑ | ||||
| Sigovan et al [ | Magnetic resonance angiogram CFD | Human (Brachiobasillic) n = 1 | 5 days | - | - | - | - | |
| 1 mo. | ↑ | ↑ | ↔ | X | ||||
| >6 wks. | 3 mo. | ↑ | ↑ | ↗ | X |
X no data available; ↑ Increase; ↓ Decrease;—Initial time point of analysis; ↔ no significant change; ↗ minor increase)
Species and location and shear stress distribution of mature AVFs assessed at single time points.
| Author | Methodology | Species & (location) | Time post formation | Shear stress level | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AJ | SS | V | ||||
| Kharboutly et al [ | CT angiography CFD | Human (Brachiocephalic) n = 1 | 20 yrs. | High | High | Normal |
| McGah et al [ | Ultrasound CFD | Human (Radiocephalic) n = 2 | 7.6 yrs. | High | High | Normal |
| 2.0 yrs. | High | High | Normal | |||
| (Brachiocephalic)n = 2 | 3.3 yrs. | High | High | Normal | ||
| 2.2 yrs. | High | High | Normal | |||
| Carrol et al [ | MRI Ultrasound CFD | Human (Radiocephalic) n = 1 | >1yr. | High | High | Normal |
AJ Anastomotic Junction; SS Swing Segment; V Vein
Events leading to intimal hyperplasia.
| (i) | Endothelium injury |
| ↓ | |
| Platelet adhesion | |
| ↓ | |
| Aggregation and activation of platelets and inflammatory cells at the site of endothelial injury | |
| ↓ | |
| (ii) | VSMC proliferation and migration to intima |
| ↓ | |
| Re-endothelialisation of the injured site | |
| ↓ | |
| (iii) | Intimal thickening via secretion of ECM composed of elastin, collagens, glycoproteins and proteoglycans |
| ↓ | |
| Adventitial fibroblasts migrate into intima and differentiate into myofibroblasts |
Main proteinases, cytokines and growth factors involved in IH formation.
| Source | Action | ||
|---|---|---|---|
|
| PDGF | Platelets, ECs, VSMCs | VSMC proliferation and migration |
| TGF-B | ECs, VSMCs | VSMC proliferation | |
| IGF-1 | VSMCs | ||
| bFGF | VSMCs | ||
| VEGF | ECs | Endothelisation | |
|
| MCP-1 | Macrophages, VSMCs, ECs, Fibroblasts | Monocyte recruitment |
| IL-1, IL-6 | Leucocytes, macrophages, VSMCs, ECs, Fibroblasts | Neutrophil and monocyte recruitment | |
|
| MMP-2 MMP-9 | ECs, VSMCs, Macrophages | ECM degradation and reorganisation VSMC proliferation and migration Fibroblast migration |
| TIMPs | ECs, VSMCs, Macrophages | Reduced proliferation and migration |
PDGF, platelet-derived growth factor; bFGF, basic fibroblast growth factor; IGF, insulin-like growth factor; TGF, transforming growth factor; VEGF, vascular endothelial growth factor; IL, interleukin; MCP-1 monocyte chemoattractant protein 1 MMPs; Matrix metalloproteinases, TIMPs; tissue inhibitors of MMPs
Overview of the different theories reviewed on IH within AVFs and their experimental conditions, i.e. time of analysis, shear parameter measured and effect on biological markers and intima media thickness.
| Theory | Author | Methodology | Time post formation | Shear Parameter | Biological markers | IMT |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| High Shear | Carroll et al [ | CFD Cone & plate | 1.5 hr. | High WSS | ↑MMP-2 ↑MCP-1 | X |
| 12 hr. | ||||||
| Carroll et al [ | CFD | X | ↑WSS ↑WSSG | X | X | |
| Low shear | Krishnamoorthy et al [ | CFD Histological analysis CT angiography Micro MRI | 42 days | Low WSS | X | Max IMT |
| 42 days | High WSS | X | Min IMT | |||
| Low shear & OSI | Rajabi-Jagahrgh et al [ | CFD | 2 days | Low WSS & high OSI | ||
| 28 days | X | Max IMT | ||||
| Kharboutly et al [ | CFD CT angiography | 20 yrs. | OSI | No association to calcified plaque | X | |
| Temporal WSS gradient | Kharboutly et al [ | CFD CT angiography | 20 yrs. | High TWSSG | Strongest association to calcified plaque | X |
X no data available; ↑ Increase; ↓ Decrease.
* CFD results at 2 days compared against Histological analysis at 28 days.
Fig 4Reconstructions of curved brachiocephalic & radiocephalic fistulae at different longitudinal time points.
* indicates a side to side configuration all other AVFs were configured in an end to side manner.
Fig 5Schematic overview of the various data-processing methods employed in the reviewed articles.
Fig 6A fistula between the femoral artery and vein in a porcine model and a brachiobasillic fistula in a human patient is shown.
For straight configurations there was a larger increase in arterial lumen area compared to venous lumen area at early time points.