Michigan Vascular Access

Michigan Vascular Access Michigan Vascular Access, PC (MVA) is a professional surgical practice created to bring high-quality

Michigan Vascular Access, PC (MVA) is a professional surgical practice created to bring high-quality vascular access services and the latest in research and industry progress to the hemodialysis patients of Southeast Michigan.Michigan Vascular Access sees patients from over one hundred dialysis units all over Southeast Michigan and extending from Battle Creek and Kalamazoo to Monroe, to Flint and Lapeer, Fowlerville and Fenton, Muskegon and beyond. Michigan Vascular Access is a true regional surgical practice. Dr. Webb is an American Board of Surgery certified surgeon with experience in providing and maintaining effective vascular access for hemodialysis patients: from initial long-range planning and provision of the optimal first access in new dialysis patients, to maintenance, and rescue of dysfunctional or failed accesses. Open surgical and endovascular techniques are employed by a board-certified surgeon in a C-arm fluoroscope-equipped operating room, always with anesthesia support, and always in a JCAHO-accredited hospital. Dr. Webb completed a Multi-Organ Transplant Fellowship at the Thomas Starzl Transplant Institute at the University of Pittsburgh (1992-1994) after a surgical residency at Henry Ford Hospital (1987-1992), followed by three years as an academic surgeon at the University of Miami, three years as a community surgeon in Illinois, and then three years as the Head of the Vascular Access Program at Henry Ford Hospital. He left Henry Ford in late 2003 to found Michigan Vascular Access, PC. Dr. Webb’s practice is currently limited to the care of patients who require solution of their hemodialysis access needs and problems. Read More:
http://www.drmarcwebb.com/about-mva/introduction/

--------- Arm swelling - why is it happening in this patient? -------As I have mentioned in recent posts, there are many...
08/25/2025

--------- Arm swelling - why is it happening in this patient? -------

As I have mentioned in recent posts, there are many causes of arm swelling in dialysis access - Central venous stenosis or occlusion, venous anastomotic or outflow obstruction causing retrograde collaterals or venous stasis in the arm, traumatic AV fistulas shunting flow from the access to the native venous system, over arterialization of the venous system by nondirective fistulas, and orphan fistulas left over from previous access attempts. Sometimes the diagnosis can be made with a ultrasound examination , but most often a fistulogram is required to secure a diagnosis and treat the problem. Fortunately, a percutaneous approach generally provides adequate treatment, though occasionally open surgery is required.
A 79-year-old man with a right arm loop graft presented with elevated venous pressures and arm swelling. A fistulogram was recommended.
During the fistulogram, an occlusion was noted in the outflow just above the anastomosis. Exuberant retrograde collaterals were noted down to the antecubital fossa, and draining via the cephalic vein and multiple collateral brachial veins. The occlusion was crossed with a angle tipped catheter and wire, then ballooned and stented, jailing out the collaterals and preventing recurrence.
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Lessons of the case:
(1) venous anastomotic stenosis is one of the most common complications of arm grafts. Ordinarily, the treatment is repeated venoplasty as needed and stenting as required. Most often, the consequence of the stenosis is elevated venous pressures, prolonged bleeding on decannulation, frequent infiltration and dropping clearances. If there is an avenue for retrograde flow into the arm, it can also cause arm swelling.
(2) stenting the anastomosis is usually a good idea because it jails out the collaterals, prevents early recurrence which is common with venoplasty alone, and prevents complete loss of the direct outflow tract, which can happen - just because you get through it once doesn’t mean you’ll get through it a second time. A long stenosis or occlusion is more likely to scar closed than a very short stenosis.

--------- Finding an option after 5 previous access failures --------If you wish, you can skip the case presentation and...
08/25/2025

--------- Finding an option after 5 previous access failures --------

If you wish, you can skip the case presentation and scroll down to look at the images, which have captions explaining the case.

A 48 year old female patient on dialysis since 1994 was seen in 2023 for dialysis options after five previous accesses: (1) left forearm straight graft, (2) a left brachiocephalic fistula, (3) a right forearm loop graft, (4) a right brachiocephalic fistula; (5) and a right arm graft. She was dialyzing with a right IJ permacath when seen. Because of her extensive history spanning nearly 30 years, a bilateral venogram was recommended, showing total occlusion of the left innominate vein and stenosis of the right subclavian vein. An attempt to place a right arm graft with intraoperative venogram and possible venoplasty or stenting was offered.
In the operating room, an adequate cephalic vein was seen from the midarm up. A sheath was placed at the junction of middle and upper thirds of the cephalic vein via a cutdown. An adequate cephalic vein was seen through the cephalic arch to a stenosis in the subclavian which was dilated with a 10 mm then 12 mm balloon with good response.
Removal of the clotted and aneurysmal brachiocephalic fistula was necessary to allow exposure of the artery. After removal of the clotted fistula, a graft was placed between the brachial artery just above the antecubital fossa looping around laterally up to the cephalic vein for a end-to-side venous anastomosis in the upper arm. The cephalic vein as ligated below the venous anastomosis to prevent retrograde flow in the arm.
In one month, the patient had a functioning graft with moderate arm swelling. On return to the operating room for a fistulogram we saw a patent graft, significant cephalic arch stenosis and a patent subclavian. The permacath was removed, the cephalic arch was dilated, and because of poor response to venoplasty, also stented. The patient was allowed to use her graft from that point without difficulty.

Lessons of the case:
(1) a 30 year dialysis history and five previous upper extremity accesses do not necessarily preclude another successful upper extremity access;
(2) in this case, a preoperative bilateral venogram helped us identify which extremity had potential in which did not; while a intraoperative venogram allowed an intervention (dilation of a severe subclavian stenosis) which lowered the risk of complications and improved the chances of success - both were important, neither precluded the other, and there was no duplication of services between the two.
(3) although most arm grafts are placed to the axillary veins, sometimes a cephalic vein which is not long enough for a fistula can still be used as a graft outflow;
(4) although the cephalic arch appeared patent and healthy at the time of graft placement, a month later it was becoming sclerotic and complicated with collaterals causing arm swelling - veins under the stress of higher flows will change, and what looks good at first may not be good enough when you look at it later.

From failed forearm access with a damaged upper arm cephalic vein, to functioning brachiocephalic fistula and catheter r...
08/25/2025

From failed forearm access with a damaged upper arm cephalic vein, to functioning brachiocephalic fistula and catheter removal in eight weeks.
A 35-year-old male patient with a forearm graft removed for infection and a left IJ permacath was seen. Although the cephalic vein above the antecubital fossa was damaged, he had a good lateral branch. During the creation of a left brachiocephalic fistula by lateral branch transposition, stenoses were noted at the junction of obliterated medial and patent lateral branches, and around the left IJ permacath. Taking advantage of the cutdown for fistula creation, it was easy to place a sheath in the lower end of the vein and run a balloon up to dilate both these areas.
Postoperatively, the patient experienced arm swelling and pulsatility, so both areas were redilated at about a month out, and the fistula was released for use at six weeks. At two months, dialysis was successful enough to be able to take the catheter out.

Lessons of the case:
(1) A previous forearm access may have dilated and matured the veins in the upper arm enough to allow a fistula to develop quickly:
(2) Although the most commonly used medial branch was obliterated, a lateral branch can frequently be utilized;
(3) Even if a preoperative ultrasound shows damage to the target vein, an intraoperative venogram shows that the vein is usable after an intervention;
(4) A venogram performed with a sheath in the vein, as is usually done intraoperatively, allows for easy intervention such as balloon venoplasty or stent placement;
(5) One intervention is not always enough, and a repeat venoplasty or branch ligation may be needed.

So ........ you want to know about "Dr. Joe"?Years ago, I worked at a small surgical hospital near 8 Mile and Dequindre ...
08/22/2025

So ........ you want to know about "Dr. Joe"?
Years ago, I worked at a small surgical hospital near 8 Mile and Dequindre in Warren. The place was fabulously efficient, and turnover was quick - sometimes I barely had time to grab a bite between cases. One day I was sitting in the small cafeteria with a few minutes to spare while the team was getting the patient in the room, transferred from the gurney, and then put to sleep. I was slurping the last mouthful when they paged me overhead, "Dr. Webb to OR One!". The family, not realizing that a lot of things need to happen before I can even prep the patient, flipped out - "They're paging Dr. Webb - he's not even in the OR!! Where is he? What's going on?". I got them calmed down, but it was an unnecessary stress for people who are nervous already - I told the OR staff, "If I'm not there when you are ready for me, don't page 'Dr. Webb', page 'Dr. Joe', and the families won't worry". All well and good - worked like a charm. I got my lunch and no wasted time.
But ....... we got a new CEO about that time, and she was not in on the arrangement. She didn't want to look like she didn't know things, so she didn't ask, but she became concerned about this mysterious "Dr. Joe" who was always being paged to the OR, but wasn't on the schedule or the active staff list - was someone sneaking in to the hospital to do illicit surgery? Was the staff running a scam behind her back? Was everybody hiding some horrible secret, building up to some expose or tragedy? Did everyone else know stuff she didn't? It didn't last that long - as soon as she pulled me aside I filled her in. "I am Dr. Joe!"

Tomorrow I am going to show you how this nightmare venogram gets turned into a nice fistula in six weeks. But TODAY I am...
08/20/2025

Tomorrow I am going to show you how this nightmare venogram gets turned into a nice fistula in six weeks. But TODAY I am going to tell you that as of September 11th and 12th, I will be seeing patients again at the DMC Heart Hospital Vascular Clinic, Suite #64100, 311 Mack Avenue, DETROIT MICHIGAN!! Back in action! Big city! Gotta love it!
If I could have said anything earlier, I would have - it has been an agonizing time trying to find the right place, but I think being at DMC will allow me to continue my service to some of the most worthy yet underserved people, organize and publish my results, and allow me to pass on some of what I've learned this past 25 years. Best of all, an end to working 70-80 hour weeks while wrestling with the insurance companies.
To arrange an appointment, call the DMC Vascular Clinic at 313-832-0650 and tell them that "Dr. Joe" sent you. I will tell you about "Dr. Joe" next time.

As you may know, I was blessed over my career with a large number of interesting referrals, which form the bulk of my Fa...
07/30/2025

As you may know, I was blessed over my career with a large number of interesting referrals, which form the bulk of my Facebook posts. Although just over 50% of my new patient referrals were for first-time access, the remainder were patients with problems with their existing accesses, failing accesses, "no access options", or higher risk patients. This patient with a high flow fistula came from the western part of Michigan.

------- Complex flow reduction in a patient with high-bifurcation of the brachial artery ------

The patient was a 45-year-old male referred for an aneurysmal and pulsatile left arm fistula with, arm pain, prolonged bleeding and demonstrated high flows. He denied hand symptoms but admitted to occasional shortness of breath, dyspnea on exertion, and paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea.
A recent cardiac evaluation included an echocardiogram showing reduced global systolic function with a ejection fraction in the 35 to 40% range, wall motion abnormalities, bilateral atrial dilation, moderate to severe pulmonary hypertension with a RVS of 58 mm Hg; a stress test negative for reversible ischemia but with moderate fixed defects suggesting previous infarction in the distribution of the right coronary artery and LAD.
A recent vascular assessment in Battle Creek locally demonstrated a mean flow volume in the fistula of 5689 mL per minute and no other abnormalities other than excessive size.
On physical examination, the patient was a well-developed middle-aged male in no apparent distress, alert and conversive. He had a torturous and mildly aneurysmal left brachiocephalic fistula with a strong full cycle thrill and palpable radial pulses bilaterally. There was mild to moderate lower extremity edema. Office ultrasound demonstrated a patent sizable fistula without signs of stenosis or diverting branches. High bifurcation of the left brachial artery was noted from the upper third of the arm, with a 1 cm feeding artery proximally, and retrograde flow distally with evidence of cross antecubital collateralization from the ulnar artery by color flow Doppler.
The patient was offered a flow reduction procedure with a intraoperative fistulogram and flow measurements.
The procedure was done with regional anesthesia plus local and sedation to avoid the hemodynamic effects of general anesthesia and to allow for accurate flow measurements. The initial fistulogram demonstrated a large fistula without dramatic abnormalities and with patent cephalic arch and central veins. High bifurcation was confirmed although the retrograde arterial examination was limited by difficulty getting above the bifurcation and high flow. Flows were measured by a thermodilution method up to 4300 mL per minute.
The first part of the fistula was skeletonized and extreme thinning of the vessel wall was noted near the arterial anastomosis, making aneurysmoplasty hazardous with a risk of rupture (see "Lessons of the cases #3"), . Accordingly, the first part of the fistula from the arterial anastomosis to the lateral bend just above the antecubital crease was completely skeletonized and excised, the anastomosis being closed with direct repair of the brachial artery primarily. Re-arterialization of the fistula was performed with a 6 mm Artegraft from the artery proximal to the previous anastomosis. During the process, the artery was purged proximally and distally, showing very strong retrograde flow. After re-arterialization, flow measurements were repeated and found to be in the 3600 ml/min range.
Further flow reduction was indicated. Because of the very strong retrograde flow in the artery distal to the anastomosis, and previously demonstrated cross antecubital collateralization by color Doppler ultrasound, the artery distal to the new anastomosis was banded with a 7 mm Impra graft section to reduce retrograde flow without ligation of the vessel. Flows were remeasured and found to be in the 2300 ml/min range, showing that significant retrograde flow had been reduced. Next, a 5 cm stretch of the Impra graft was placed around the Artegraft and closed with interrupted 5-0 proline sutures until the flows were measured reproducibly in the 1300 ml/min range. The wound was closed with a quarter inch penrose drain placed in the excision bed and the patient kept overnight. The fistula remained usable for dialysis above the revision.
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Lessons of the case:
(1) Arterialized veins can grow to significant size and carry significant volumes of blood flow which can lead to complications such as distal extremity ischemia, high-output heart failure, pulmonary hypertension and right heart failure.
(2) Noninvasive ultrasound measurements of extremity blood flows are operator dependent and less accurate than thermodilution methods which require placement of an intravascular probe. Both are affected by the patient’s physiologic state including volume status, blood pressure and the effects of anesthesia. Inhalational anesthesia and IV propofol both effect blood pressure and cardiac output profoundly. For this reason, a procedure depending on accurate flow measurements is best done with regional anesthesia, local and sedation.
(3) Flow reduction in large fistulas is most commonly done by “banding”, which is a grab bag term for reducing the size of the dialysis conduit by placing ligatures or wraps around the fistula. Aneurysmoplasty (revision with reduction of size) is another option, and may be required just to allow placement of a band around the fistula. Other methods include replacement of the inflow section with a smaller diameter graft or section of vein.
(4) Patients undergoing flow reduction frequently experience immediate relief from digital ischemia or heart failure symptoms. However, long-term changes to cardiac structure and function may take a longer time to resolve or may prove to be permanent.
(5) If a vein can grow to become an aneurysmal fistula, a new vein segment or biologic graft (Artegraft or Procol) placed to reduce or moderate flow can also grow over time. Therefore, in situ inflow replacements, proximalizations, distalizations or bandings utilizing biologic materials can be expected to lose their efficacy with return of the high flow state eventually. For that reason they are not recommended in favor of a PTFE band or conduit. Aneurysmoplasty (revision with reduction of size), alone is not durable, as the revised section will start to stretch and redilate right away.
(5) Because of the risk of recurrence, once a high flow access is identified, long-term flow monitoring is recommended.

The patient is coming in for a dialysis access procedure that will require C-arm imaging - What's wrong with this pictur...
07/27/2025

The patient is coming in for a dialysis access procedure that will require C-arm imaging - What's wrong with this picture?

Over the years, I have been fortunate to have been sent many interesting people with dialysis access problems. Between 4...
07/13/2025

Over the years, I have been fortunate to have been sent many interesting people with dialysis access problems. Between 40 and 50% of my new patient referrals have come with a problem, or complaint, or question about their previous experience and results. Since they didn't know me, I was able to pretend to be an expert and that I understood their problems. What I DID understand was that they needed help, and wanted to believe.
This lady originally came from a fair distance with a failed forearm graft and in 2008 I gave her a right arm graft that lasted until 2024 with a lot of maintenance procedures and a few stents in the graft. I had not seen her for a few years until see returned with a femoral permacath, telling me that the local surgeons did not want to declot the arm graft because "she might have a PE", which is actually true of any thrombectomy procedure. Because she had been clotted for weeks by that time, because it was a 16 year old graft (i.e., she got her moneys worth from a graft that ordinarility might last 3-5 years), and because it had already been heavily stented), I offered her a new replacement graft in the same arm.
The intraoperative venogram showed that the outflow and central veins were okay, and her new graft was placed around the first one, using the artery and vein just above the previous anastomoses.
The lessons of the case:
(1) you don't always have to go to the other arm - a thrombectomy and revision may be possible if some of the old circuit is okay, or a totally new graft can be placed.
(2) We do worry about PEs, but it is wrong to use that as an excuse to avoid helping someone.
(3) I normally tell people that a graft is expected to last 3 - 5 years, but obviously they can last longer if well maintained.

A SECOND CHANCE AT A TRANSPOSED BASILIC FISTULA.Feel free to skip the initial presentation and the "Lessons of the Case"...
06/22/2025

A SECOND CHANCE AT A TRANSPOSED BASILIC FISTULA.
Feel free to skip the initial presentation and the "Lessons of the Case" at first - the picture captions tell the story, and you can scroll back to the discussion if you wish. ------------------------
A 72-year-old male patient was seen for dialysis access after a radiocephalic fistula placed in 2013 was lost in 2017. A left brachial basilic fistula had been created in January 2018, caused severe swelling of the left side of the face and arm, and was ligated. He was dialyzing via a left IJ permacath.
On exam, the patient had a BMI of 26, a clotted forearm fistula, and a pulsatile lump above the median epicondyle. Office ultrasound showed the stump of a ligated brachial fistula, and a separate sizable and patent basilic vein. On the right, the cephalic vein was less than 2 mm and the basilic vein was 3.7mm.
The history included HTN, CAD with previous MI and CABG, aortic stenosis with valve replacement, A-fib with long-term anticoagulation, endocarditis on long-term antibiotics, old stroke with left-sided weakness, insulin-dependent diabetes, and malignant neoplasm of kidney s/p nephrectomy.
Options included a left arm transposed basilic fistula conditioned on successful recanalization of presumed central venous stenosis, or a right arm graft. A reduction in the coumadin dosing to achieve a INR of 2 was recommended with a possible need for a drain and overnight stay.
The patient was prepped for surgery under general anesthesia with the left arm and left IJ permacath in the field. Please refer to the pictures and captions for details of the procedure.
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Lessons of the case:
(1) almost all central catheters lead to stenosis and occlusion if left in long enough, but left IJ permacaths are both statistically more likely (4 times), and more difficult to deal with because the left innominant traverses the precordium, is much longer, and has more curves. I always worry when I see a patient with a left IJ permacath.
(2) the patient had a left basilic fistula ligated for arm and facial swelling, sacrificing a fistula to save a permacath - why didn't they remove the catheter, balloon the stenosis and save the fistula?
(3) although the fistula was ligated, the basilic vein was found to be patent all the way down into the forearm. How is that possible if the basilic fistula was ligated? The answer is evident from comparing Image 1 (the first arm photograph) with Image 10 (my first post-op photo). The "brachial basilic" fistula was more accurately a brachial-median antecubital preliminary fistula, and would have required a secondary transposition to make it usable. Either that was just too complicated with the arm swelling and central stenosis, or they had another plan;
(4) Failure of a preliminary fistula, one done to develop a vein that is questionable, or too small to transpose, doesn't necessarily doom the whole project - If the main vein is adequate, the transposition can still be done bypassing a stenosis in the preliminary fistula (end-to-end), or by anastomosing the transposed vein to a new spot on the artery (neo-anastomosis).
(5) if on the other hand, the preliminary fistula failed because the basilic vein itself did not dilate, a transposition is likely to give you a bad fistula which would be a disappointment. Better to opt out of the fistula concept and place an arm graft.
(6) Intra-operative venography via a cutdown on the vein allows you to place a sheath, advance a catheter, recanalize an occlusion, balloon a narrowing or place a stent, thus converting a contraindication (outflow stenosis or occlusion) to a permissability. If a vein is occluded around a catheter, sometimes the only way to get through is to take the catheter out over a wire, then using that wire to do your intervention.
(7) nothing stays the same for very long - frequently, you have to go back and re-fix something that you fixed before. We call that "maintenance", and it should be expected. But there is "low maintenance", and "high maintenance", bringing up the issue of intervention durability. We want our results to be durable - we want to get a benefit from the procedure long enough to justify doing it in the first place. Newcomers to this field are excited to post pictures of their interventions ("Look what I did!!"), without realizing that the "pretty picture" might not last very long.

EARLY CANNULATION GRAFT REPLACEMENT OF A LEFT TRANSPOSED BASILIC FISTULA WITH SKIN BREAKDOWNI apologize for this exhaust...
05/11/2025

EARLY CANNULATION GRAFT REPLACEMENT OF A LEFT TRANSPOSED BASILIC FISTULA WITH SKIN BREAKDOWN

I apologize for this exhausting series of replacement grafts, but it should be clear that I'm doing a project and trying to get as much support material done before a national meeting next week. I promised to show a little more versatility after the meeting. Feel free to skip the story and scroll down to the pictures.
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The patient is a 44-year-old female with a left transposed basilic fistula created in 2012. Aneurysmoplasties performed for size and skin thinning were performed in a staged fashion in 2019. She returned to the practice on this occasion with partial and full-thickness skin defects over the aneurysmal zones of frequent cannulation.
Office ultrasound exam demonstrated heavy calcification of the fistula and a pseudoaneurysm at the site of one previous aneurysmoplasty. The heavy calcification and scar tissue from previous revisions argued against a repeat revision at the site and the patient was offered a ligation of the fistula and early cannulation graft replacement.
At the time of surgery, the outflow vein above the swing zone of the existing fistula was exposed with an incision in the axilla. Then the distal part of the fistula from the arterial anastomosis to above the pseudoaneurysm was skeletonized and removed. The old anastomosis was closed. A 4 to 7 mm Flixene early cannulation graft was tunneled lateral to the existing fistula from the axilla down to antecubital fossa. A side-to-end arterial anastomosis was performed from the artery distal to the previous anastomosis, An end-graft to side vein venous anastomosis was performed to the outflow vein above the previous fistulas swing zone, making this truly the new graft and not a revision. The original fistula’s swing zone was then doubly clamped and divided distal to the new venous anastomosis. The orphan segment of the old fistula remaining was irrigated clear and all three open ends oversewn.
Because of extensive raw area from removal of the aneurysmal distal fistula, a JP drain was placed during closure and the patient was admitted for drain management. The drain was removed the next day and the patient discharged after dialysis with her new graft. No catheter was required.
LESSONS FROM THE CASE:
There are a number of fistulas represented in this series, and I don’t regret doing them but it’s clear that they don’t last forever. You can keep tinkering with them, like with a classic hot rod out in the garage, but if you need them to deliver the goods day after day reliably, sometimes you need to bite the bullet and get a more reliable vehicle.

Early cannulation graft to replace an aneurysmal transposed basilic fistula           ----------------------------------...
05/11/2025

Early cannulation graft to replace an aneurysmal transposed basilic fistula
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This transposed basilic fistula was created in two stages by two different surgeons in 2013 and released for use a month after the second operation. In 2016, an aneurysm was resected and repaired with a section of 10 mm PTFE and in 2017 a pseudoaneurysm in the inflow section was excised and repaired with an end to end re-anastomosis. In 2024, the patient returned to the practice complaining of difficulty cannulating and significant infiltration. Aneurysmal changes, several pseudoaneurysms, an area of laminated clot, and a calcified fistula with an overlarge arterial anastomosis were seen. The patient was offered a Flixene early cannulation graft replacement.
This was performed with partial excision of the inflow half and closure/repair of the arterial anastomosis. A side-to-end neo arterial anastomosis was performed just proximal to the previous, and an end-to-end venous anastomosis to the outflow vein above the previous fistulas swing zone segment was done. The fistula was irrigated clear and then oversewn at both ends. Because of the large raw surface, a temporary drain was placed and the patient kept overnight. The drain was removed the next day and the patient discharged after dialysis with the new graft. No catheter was required.

The lessons of the case:
1 - Nothing lasts forever - not even a fistula - not even true love (sorry Wesley, sorry Buttercup). Sometimes you have to move on.

2 - The fistula can be replaced with an early cannulation graft in one comprehensive procedure rather than needing a multistage process, while eliminating the need for an interim catheter.

Early cannulation graft replacement for failing grafts or fistulas: end the “lose your kidney get a catheter, get an acc...
05/10/2025

Early cannulation graft replacement for failing grafts or fistulas: end the “lose your kidney get a catheter, get an access, get rid of your catheter, lose your access, get a catheter, rinse, repeat” cycle of frustration.
One advantage of seeing people over and over again for 20 years is that you see the successes and the failures, how one thing leads to the next, the unintended consequences, and you can get a sense of progression. For example: we pushed so hard to get fistulas in almost everybody, saying “This fistula can last as long as you do”, then found out that mostly they don’t (but see my March 7th, 2024 post for the story of a guy with a 20 year old fistula who wanders back into my office having forgotten who created his fistula, then sees his 20-year-old picture on the wall). Sometimes they last 20 years, sometimes they last seven years, sometimes they are a big disappointment from the beginning, sometimes they fail.
We don’t try to do a fistula in everyone no matter what, because there are some patients who will never be able to develop and maintain a fistula no matter how hard we try. The important thing is to understand the patient’s vascular assets, their limitations, the urgency of the need, the surgeons own abilities and the probabilities of success with each option the patient has.
When the patient has a problematic fistula, a failing fistula, or a fistula that it’s just plain worn out from being poked over and over again for 15 years, the practitioner guiding the patient has a certain responsibility to think about the future and how to advise the patient responsibly, most critically how to manage the transition from a failing access to the next access effectively and efficiently without requiring a major disruption to the patient’s life, or dialysis schedule, and hopefully avoiding an exposure to a damaging catheter. We do not spend nearly enough time on these considerations.
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The patient is a 63-year-old female on maintenance dialysis via a right arm graft. She originally had a one-stage transposed basilic fistula that was plagued with inflow and swing-zone outflow stenosis and was replaced with a Flixene early cannulation graft after only two years. She did well after that with a maintenance venoplasty roughly once a year, but returned five years after her first replacement with a complaint of prolonged bleeding and was found to have graft defects in the zones of frequent cannulation (the “canoe sign”) associated with skin thinning over the defects. A Fluency covered stent placement in the area can be done as a temporary measure but the focal repeated cannulation tears up the stent even more quickly than it tore up the graft, and control of bleeding is only temporary. The prudent course is to plan for another graft replacement.

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