1967
DOI: 10.1055/s-0028-1103641
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Die subkutane arteriovenöse Fistel zur intermittierenden Hämodialyse-Behandlung

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Cited by 28 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…This artificial connection allows the vein to become larger and for the walls of the vein to thicken, a process termed maturation. A year later the technique had been amended to allow the construction of an end-to-end anastomosis in the lower arm between the cephalic vein and the radial artery [22]. This technique restricted arterial inflow into the AVF to that blood delivered by the feeding radial artery led to a high risk of developing steal syndrome.…”
Section: The Arteriovenous Fistulamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This artificial connection allows the vein to become larger and for the walls of the vein to thicken, a process termed maturation. A year later the technique had been amended to allow the construction of an end-to-end anastomosis in the lower arm between the cephalic vein and the radial artery [22]. This technique restricted arterial inflow into the AVF to that blood delivered by the feeding radial artery led to a high risk of developing steal syndrome.…”
Section: The Arteriovenous Fistulamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Historically the end‐to‐end technique was first described by Sperling et al (9) using a stapler for suturing the anastomosis (Fig. 4).…”
Section: End‐to‐end Anastomosismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These fears "never materialized" and later on the AVF spread, mainly in the European centers, with good acceptance in the US too. According to the original technique, the anastomosis between the radial artery and the cephalic forearm vein was constructed in a side-to-side fashion, but risks of distal steal syndrome and peripheral venous hypertension made the end-to-end feature more useful, proposed in 1967 for the first time by Sperling et al (15). These risks were known to Röhl et al, when he performed the radiocephalic AVF using an end vein-to side of artery configuration and then ligated the radial artery distally to the anastomosis, resulting in an end-to-end anastomosis from a functional point of view (16).…”
Section: Arteriovenous Fistulas With Native Vesselsmentioning
confidence: 99%