Publications by authors named "Haimanot Wasse"

Article Synopsis
  • The concept of "venous outflow stenosis" is better understood as "inflow-outflow imbalance," where the outflow capacity of arteriovenous (AV) access can't adequately handle the blood inflow volume (Qa) without increased pressure.
  • This imbalance leads to higher outflow resistance and intraluminal pressure, causing various clinical issues that impact patient health.
  • The authors suggest that assessing access flow is crucial for treatment planning, advocating for a dual treatment strategy of angioplasty for low or normal Qa cases and flow reduction for those with excessive Qa.
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Article Synopsis
  • Mechanisms behind long COVID are not well understood, but studying immunological responses may help clarify clinical variations among patients.
  • Researchers analyzed plasma levels of 42 biomarkers from 101 individuals with long COVID, identifying three distinct inflammatory clusters: limited immune activation, innate immune activation, and systemic immune activation.
  • Although these inflammatory clusters did not directly correlate with specific symptoms, they were linked to clinical factors such as age, BMI, and vaccination status, suggesting that immune responses may vary along with these variables.
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Article Synopsis
  • The study explored a new biological acellular vascular conduit (TRUE AVC™) for hemodialysis access, aimed at improving the limitations of traditional methods like early thrombosis and failed maturation.
  • Five patients were involved in the clinical trial, receiving the conduit implanted in their upper arms; follow-up evaluations showed promising blood flow rates and no significant complications up to 26 weeks post-surgery.
  • Results indicated an 80% primary assisted patency rate and 100% secondary patency over six months, suggesting that this novel conduit is a safe and viable option for dialysis access in individuals with end-stage kidney disease.
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Background: The perforator vein determines whether it is feasible to create a percutaneous (pAVF) or surgical "Gracz-type" arteriovenous fistula (sAVF). Creating a standard anatomic classification of the antecubital region is beneficial to both the selection of the appropriate device and/or procedure and technical outcomes. Accordingly, an analysis of a large cohort of patients undergoing pAVF/sAVF was performed, focusing on perforator vein anatomical suitability, and a novel anatomical classification of the antecubital region was developed and proposed.

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Long COVID, a type of post-acute sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 (PASC), has been associated with sustained elevated levels of immune activation and inflammation. However, the mechanisms that drive this inflammation remain unknown. Inflammation during acute coronavirus disease 2019 could be exacerbated by microbial translocation (from the gut and/or lung) to blood.

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Brachiocephalic arteriovenous fistulas (AVF) makeup approximately one third of prevalent dialysis vascular accesses. The most common cause of malfunction with this access is cephalic arch stenosis (CAS). The accepted requirement for treatment of a venous stenosis lesion is ⩾50% stenosis associated with hemodynamically abnormalities.

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As numerous complex pathologies stem from cellular energy dysfunction, we aimed to elucidate mitochondrial function and associated stress pathologies in kidney disease in a cohort of hemodialysis patients with end-stage kidney disease (ESKD). The bioenergetics study was conducted using peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) of ESKD patients (n = 29) and healthy controls (no ESKD, n = 10). PBMCs were isolated from whole blood and seeded into assay plates to detect changes in oxidative phosphorylation and glycolysis.

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Rationale & Objective: Optimizing vascular access use is crucial for long-term hemodialysis patient care. Because vascular access use varies internationally, we examined international differences in arteriovenous fistula (AVF) patency and time to becoming catheter-free for patients receiving a new AVF.

Study Design: Prospective cohort study.

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Rationale & Objective: Vascular access type (arteriovenous fistula [AVF] vs arteriovenous graft [AVG] vs central venous catheter [CVC]) associates with clinical outcomes in patients with end-stage kidney disease undergoing hemodialysis. Whether a similar association exists with outcomes after kidney transplantation is unknown. We hypothesized that AVGs would associate with worse outcomes, perhaps owing to persistent subclinical inflammation.

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Purpose: Thoracic central venous obstruction is commonly associated with the use of central venous catheters. The Study was an Food and Drug Administration-approved US Investigational Device Exemption study designed to evaluate the performance and safety of the Surfacer System when used to facilitate central venous access in patients with thoracic central venous obstruction.

Methods: Thirty patients were enrolled in this prospective, multicenter, single-arm study between December 2017 and May 2019.

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Background: Vasodilator nuclear stress testing is frequently ordered for risk stratification prior to kidney transplantation. Since Rb-positron emission tomography-computed tomography can measure myocardial blood flow (MBF), the response to vasodilator stress can be verified rendering the results of the scan more reliable.

Methods: We reviewed the MBF response to dipyridamole infusion in 328 patients with end-stage kidney disease (ESKD) prior to transplant (188 hemodialysis-HD, 120 peritoneal dialysis-PD, and 20 pre-dialysis patients-CKD5) and in 100 controls with normal kidney function.

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Although not common, hemodialysis access-induced distal ischemia is a serious condition resulting in significant hemodialysis patient morbidity. Patients with signs and symptoms suggestive of hand ischemia frequently present to the general and interventional nephrologist for evaluation. In order to care for these cases, it is necessary to understand this syndrome and its management.

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End-stage kidney disease patients who are candidates for surgical arteriovenous fistula creation commonly experience obstacles to a functional surgical arteriovenous fistula, including protracted wait time for creation, poor maturation, and surgical arteriovenous fistula dysfunction that can result in significant patient morbidity. The recent approval of two endovascular devices designed to create a percutaneous arteriovenous fistula enables arteriovenous fistula creation to be placed in the hands of interventionalists, thereby increasing the number of arteriovenous fistula providers, reducing wait times, and allowing the patient to avoid surgery. Moreover, current studies demonstrate that patients with percutaneous arteriovenous fistula experience improved time to arteriovenous fistula maturation.

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Background: An arteriovenous fistula (AVF) is the recommended vascular access for hemodialysis (HD). Previous studies have not examined the resources and costs associated with creating and maintaining AVFs.

Study Design: Retrospective observational study.

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Background: Vascular access practice is strongly associated with clinical outcomes. There is substantial international variation in the use of arteriovenous fistulas (AVFs) and grafts (AVGs), as well as AVF maturation time and location.

Study Design: Prospective cohort study.

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This paper is part of the Clinical Trial Endpoints for Dialysis Vascular Access Project of the American Society of Nephrology Kidney Health Initiative. The purpose of this project is to promote research in vascular access by clarifying trial end points which would be best suited to inform decisions in those situations in which supportive clinical data are required. The focus of a portion of the project is directed toward arteriovenous access.

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Article Synopsis
  • * A group of experts proposed standardized definitions for complications related to central venous catheters to help design future clinical trials aimed at gaining FDA approval.
  • * The workgroup defined critical issues like diagnosing catheter-related bloodstream infections, identifying catheter dysfunction based on specific flow criteria, and recognizing central vein obstruction while calling for further research to clarify these definitions.
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The population of patients with end-stage renal disease (ESRD) in the United States is progressively increasing, with hemodialysis (HD) as the major mode of renal replacement therapy. National guidelines recommend increasing the use of arteriovenous fistulae (AVF) in both incident and prevalent hemodialysis patients. Pre-operative vascular mapping prior to the surgical creation of an AVF is now considered standard of care and may be helpful in achieving these goals.

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While central venous stenosis is a common consequence of protracted central venous catheter use, intracardiac device transvenous leads, and central venous instrumentation, the majority of patients who develop symptomatic central venous stenosis present with characteristic venous hypertension. However, some patients may develop an abnormal intracranial venous circulation and present with neurologic symptoms. This paper will summarize findings from case reports that describe the neurologic sequelae that can develop as a result of central venous stenosis/occlusion in end-stage renal disease patients with a functional arteriovenous access.

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