A Tyrell vein collar at the venous anastomosis of a forearm AVG resulted in premature graft failure. The use of a Tyrell vein collar may accelerate venous anastomosis intimal hyperplasia.
Venous stenosis and occlusion are a major cause of vascular access dysfunction and failure. The HeRO Graft bypasses occlusion and traverses stenosis with outflow directly into the central venous circulation. A randomized, multicenter study was conducted to evaluate the efficacy and safety of the HeRO Graft relative to conventional AV grafts. The design was to enroll 143 patients in a 2:1 randomization ratio between HeRO and conventional AV control groups. Data on 72 subjects (52 HeRO Graft and 20 AV graft controls) were obtained. The HeRO Graft and control cohorts were comparable in baseline characteristics. Adequacy of dialysis, bacteremia rates, and adverse events were consistent between groups. Twelve month Kaplan-Meier estimates for primary and secondary patency rates were 34.8% and 67.6% in the HeRO Graft cohort, and 30.6% and 58.4% in the control cohort. There was no statistical difference in terms of patency between groups. The rates of intervention were 2.2/year for HeRO Graft and 1.6/year for the control (p = 0.100). Median days to loss of secondary patency was 238 for HeRO Graft versus 102 for the control (p = 0.032). The HeRO Graft appears to provide similar patency, adequacy of dialysis, and bacteremia rates to those of conventional AV grafts.
Upper-extremity deep vein thrombosis is a common iatrogenic complication in patients who have had central venous catheters, and is usually associated with mild symptoms. This report is of a 57-year-old craftsman who developed phlegmasia cerulea dolens of his left upper extremity 16 hours after removal of an ipsilateral subclavian vein catheter. The extremity was tensely edematous, hand was mottled, and tips of the digits were cyanotic. Arterial Doppler signals were normal. Fourteen hours of extremity elevation and heparin anticoagulation resulted in no clinical improvement. Duplex ultrasonography and venography showed diffuse thrombosis of the veins of the arm and forearm, but patent axillary and subclavian veins. Due to the severity of the edema and evidence of vascular compromise, an infusion catheter, introduced through the right common femoral artery, was positioned in the left brachial artery and an intra-arterial urokinase infusion of the left upper extremity initiated. Within 12 hours, the patient's left upper extremity improved notably. Ninety-three hours later, the urokinase infusion was stopped and the left upper extremity appeared normal. Follow-up duplex ultrasonography documented no residual thrombus in the deep veins of the left arm and forearm. Six months later, the patient has no residual disability, extremity edema, or limitations in function. An extensive review of the English literature identified no previous reports of intraarterial thrombolysis for upper-extremity phlegmasia cerulea dolens. This case is discussed and pertinent literature reviewed.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.