Abstract

Blood flow through arteriovenous fistulae in patients undergoing hemodialysis needs to be within a certain range for optimal management. Magnetic resonance (MR) velocity mapping is a new modality that allows the noninvasive measurement of blood flow volume. This technique was applied in 13 patients with either a Brescia-Cimino shunt (N = 6) or a Polytetrafluoroethylene graft (Goretex, N = 7). Fistula flow volume measured by MR velocity mapping was 1386 +/- 411 ml/min (mean +/- SD, range 644 to 1921 ml/min). Interstudy reproducibility of MR velocity mapping was good (r = 0.94). Interstudy reproducibility of MR velocity mapping was good (r = 0.94). MR velocity mapping derived flow volumes showed good correlation with values obtained with an indicator dilution technique using Indocyanine Green (ICG) which was performed simultaneously in eight patients (r = 0.86). We conclude that MR velocity mapping is an accurate noninvasive method to quantify flow volume through arteriovenous fistulae in patients requiring hemodialysis.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call