| Literature DB >> 32711458 |
Matt Chiung-Yu Chen1, Mei-Jui Weng2, Bai-Chun Chang3, Hsiu-Ching Lai3, Misoso Yi-Wen Wu3, Chia-Yun Fu3, Yi-Chun Liu4, Wen-Che Chi4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hyper-pulsatility of hemodialysis arteriovenous fistula (AVF) is the basic physical examination finding when there is outflow stenosis. The arm elevation test can also be utilized to detect outflow stenosis. If there is no significant outflow stenosis, the AVF should collapse, at least partially, because of the effect of gravity when the AVF-bearing arm is elevated to a level above that of the heart. However, if there is significant outflow stenosis, the portion of the AVF downstream of the stenosis will collapse, while the portion upstream of the stenosis will remain distended (Clin J Am Soc Nephro 8:1220-7, 2013). In our daily practice, when performing the arm elevation test, we not only observe the collapsibility of the access outflow but also palpate the outflow to identify a background thrill that sometimes disappears with the arm at rest, only to reappear when the arm is elevated. If there is no thrill upon arm elevation, we assume that the outflow stenosis is severe and refer to this condition as "physical examination significant outflow stenosis" (PESOS). The aim of this study is to characterize PESOS using percentage stenosis and Doppler flow parameters.Entities:
Keywords: Arteriovenous shunt; Blood flow velocity; Diagnosis; Hemodialysis; Physical examination; Surgery
Year: 2020 PMID: 32711458 PMCID: PMC7382789 DOI: 10.1186/s12882-020-01968-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Nephrol ISSN: 1471-2369 Impact factor: 2.388
Fig. 1The AVF outflow score
Fig. 2Roadmap angiograms of an AVF with a significant collateral vein (left) and a small collateral vein (right). The back circle on the AVF indicate the score recorded site, where the Doppler flow was measured
Fig. 3The sonogram was obtained immediately after PTA and the AVF outflow was scored 3. Doppler measurement was performed through a glove-made water pad and the Doppler angle was 52°. The photograph showed the probe was placed on a glove-made water pad during Doppler measurement
Fig. 4Comparisons of flow parameters between PESOS and other outflow scores
Fig. 5Subgroup comparisons of percent stenosis for PESOS
Fig. 6a ROC curve for percent stenosis as a classifier in discrimination between PESOS and other outflow scores. b ROC curve for percent stenosis as a classifier in discrimination between critical PESOS and other outflow scores
Fig. 7Comparisons of between critical PESOS and non-critical PESOS
The diagnostic accuracy of PE findings for the detection of AVF stenosis
| Abnormal thrill | Abnormal pulsatility | PESOS | Critical PESOS | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Degree of stenosis detected | > 50% stenosis | > 50% stenosis | ≥75% outflow stenosis | ≥82% outflow stenosis |
| Sensitivity | 33% | 70% | 80% | 81% |
| Specificity | 71% | 67% | 79% | 82% |
| PPV | 61% | 74% | 85% | 57% |
| NPV | 44% | 62% | 72% | 94% |
PPV positive predictive value, NPV negative predictive value