Abstract
Hemodialysis catheter associated infections are a major source of morbidity and mortality in end stage renal disease patients. There is disagreement about the management of catheter infections, particularly concerning the removal of potentially infected tunneled dialysis catheters. A dialysis catheter should generally be removed when an infection involves a temporary hemodialysis catheter, a septic patient, a patient with a tunnel tract infection, or a patient with evidence of a metastatic infectious complication. In treating stable patients with clinically mild catheter associated bacteremia, parenteral antibiotics alone have a low success rate in eliminating the infection. Antibiotic locks are an emerging strategy for treating these patients, but at present higher rates of success and lower costs are achieved by exchanging the catheter over a guidewire. Antibiotic lock solutions, antibiotic coated catheters, and totally implantable dialysis access systems may play a large role in prevention of catheter associated infections in the future; however, further randomized controlled trials of these strategies are needed. Future efforts should concentrate on limiting the use of traditional tunneled cuffed hemodialysis catheters by early referral to vascular surgery for the creation of an arterio-venous fistula.
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