Vascular access dysfunction is a major source of morbidity for end-stage renal disease patients on hemodialysis. The arteriovenous graft is a common access type for many of these patients. Frequent stenosis formation and thrombosis complicate this form of access. Patients may have a rapidly forming and recurrent venous stenosis at the graft-vein anastomosis that has been seen in both animal models and end-stage renal disease patients to be the result of neointimal hyperplasia. This venous lesion is particularly resistant and sometimes intractable to conventional angioplasty. As a result, new therapies have been developed to reduce the formation and/or recurrence of neointimal hyperplasia. These include special cutting balloons, drug-eluting stents, and endovascular brachytherapy. The authors present the cases of 5 patients with rapidly recurrent venous lesions at the graft-vein anastomosis that derived benefit from angioplasty with the cryoballoon. The time to stenosis or thrombosis in the arteriovenous grafts was increased from a mean of 3 weeks to more than 16 weeks with this technology. Cryotherapy with the cryoballoon (cryoplasty) may represent a useful therapy for patients with intractable stenoses at or near the venous anastomosis of arteriovenous grafts.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1053/j.ajkd.2004.11.001 | DOI Listing |
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!