Abstract

ObjectiveArteriovenous fistula is the preferred vascular access for hemodialysis patients. High-flow arteriovenous fistula may cause high-output heart failure. Various procedures are used to reduce high-flow arteriovenous fistula. This study aimed to assess the efficacy of proximal artery restriction combined with distal artery ligation on flow reduction for high-flow arteriovenous fistula and on cardiac function and echocardiographic changes in patients undergoing hemodialysis. MethodsA retrospective analysis was performed on data collected from the medical records of patients undergoing hemodialysis with heart failure and high-flow arteriovenous fistula between May 2018 and May 2021. Thirty-one patients were treated with proximal artery restriction (banding juxta-anastomosis of the proximal artery) combined with distal artery ligation (anastomosis distal artery ligation). Changes in the Acute Dialysis Quality Initiative Workgroup cardiac function class, blood pressure, and echocardiography before and 6 months after flow restriction were compared, and post-intervention primary patency was followed-up. ResultsThe technical success rate of the surgery was 100%, and no surgery-related adverse events occurred. Blood flow and blood flow/cardiac output decreased significantly after flow restriction. Blood flow decreased from 2047.21 ± 398.08 mL/min to 1001.36 ± 240.42 mL/min, and blood flow/cardiac output decreased from 40.18% ± 6.76% to 22.34% ± 7.21% (P < .001). Post-intervention primary patency of arteriovenous fistula at 6, 12, and 24 months was 96.8%, 93.5%, and 75.2%, respectively. The Acute Dialysis Quality Initiative Workgroup cardiac function class improved significantly after 6 months of flow restriction (P < .001). The systolic and diastolic left heart function improved, as evidenced by a significant decrease in left atrial volume index, left ventricular end-diastolic/end-systolic diameters, left ventricular end-diastolic volume, left ventricular mass index, cardiac output, and cardiac index and an increase in lateral peak velocity of longitudinal contraction, average septal-lateral s', and lateral early diastolic peak velocity after flow restriction (P < .05). Systolic pulmonary artery pressure decreased from 32.36 ± 8.56 mmHg to 27.57 ± 8.98 mmHg (P < .05), indicating an improvement in right heart function. ConclusionsProximal artery restriction combined with distal artery ligation effectively reduced the blood flow of high-flow arteriovenous fistula and improved cardiac function.

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