Polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) graft longevity is improved when venous anastomosis stenoses are treated with stents in selected cases of older grafts that would have normally undergone abandonment or surgical revision.
Presternally exiting peritoneal dialysis (PD) catheters have been described as advantageous compared to abdominally exiting catheters with regard to infection, wound healing, and other complications. Placement of such catheters has only been described with open surgical techniques and not by percutaneous means. In this article we describe 15 patients who received percutaneously placed PD catheters with a presternal exit site. These patients received their procedures in an outpatient procedure room performed by an interventional nephrologist. In all but one case, immediate technical success was achieved. In only one case was peritonitis documented. All catheters are still functional, including some with follow-up as long as 15 months. Percutaneous placement of presternally exiting PD catheters is technically straightforward and can avoid an open surgical procedure.
Conventional angioplasty of stenoses at the venous anastomosis has been demonstrated to be an important endovascular adjunct to mechanical thrombectomy of clotted arteriovenous dialysis grafts. In some cases, however, severe venous anastomosis stenosis is resistant to angioplasty. Cutting balloon angioplasty may have an advantageous role in these difficult situations in order to avoid surgical revision. In this series of 350 patients receiving percutaneous, endovascular declotting procedures, 9 patients had high-grade venous anastomotic stenoses (opening less than 2 mm) that could not be remedied with either conventional or high-pressure noncompliant peripheral angioplasty balloons. These nine patients had the lesions opened with the use of 4 mm x 10 mm cutting balloons and placement of self-expanding nitinol stents at the venous anastomosis during the same angiography procedure. Patients were followed for patency and functionality of the graft. In all cases, immediate technical success occurred. Among these patients, the vessels have remained patent for as long as 20 months of follow-up and grafts have remained functional. Cutting balloon angioplasty may have a potential therapeutic role in resistant venous anastomotic stenoses.
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