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      Increased Blood Loss From Access Cannulation Site During Hemodialysis Is Associated With Anemia and Arteriovenous Graft Use : Access Bleeding in Hemodialysis

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          Increasing arteriovenous fistulas in hemodialysis patients: problems and solutions.

          National guidelines promote increasing the prevalence of fistula use among hemodialysis patients. The prevalence of fistulas among hemodialysis patients reflects both national, regional, and local practice differences as well as patient-specific demographic and clinical factors. Increasing fistula prevalence requires increasing fistula placement, improving maturation of new fistulas, and enhancing long-term patency of mature fistulas for dialysis. Whether a patient receives a fistula depends on several factors: timing of referral for dialysis and vascular access, type of fistula placed, patient demographics, preference of the nephrologist, surgeon, and dialysis nurses, and vascular anatomy of the patient. Whether the placed fistula is useable for dialysis depends on additional factors, including adequacy of vessels, surgeon's experience, patient demographics, nursing skills, minimal acceptable dialysis blood flow, and attempts to revise immature fistulas. Whether a mature fistula achieves long-term patency depends on the ability to prevent and correct thrombosis. An optimal outcome is likely when there is (1) a multidisciplinary team approach to vascular access; (2) consensus about the goals among all interested parties (nephrologists, surgeons, radiologists, dialysis nurses, and patients); (3) early referral for placement of vascular access; (4) restriction of vascular access procedures to surgeons with demonstrable interest and experience; (5) routine, preoperative mapping of the patient's arteries and veins; (6) close, ongoing communication among the involved parties; and (7) prospective tracking of outcomes with continuous quality assessment. Implementing these measures is likely to increase the prevalence of fistulas in any given dialysis unit. However, differences among dialysis units are likely to persist because of differences in gender, race, and co-morbidity mix of the patient population.
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            Major bleeding in hemodialysis patients.

            Few studies have examined risk factors for hemorrhage in hemodialysis patients. The contribution of warfarin and antiplatelet agent exposure to the incidence of first major bleeding episodes in hemodialysis patients was determined. Retrospective chart review was performed in eligible hemodialysis patients. Incidence rates were determined as the number of first major bleeding events divided by the total exposure time on each treatment combination. Time-dependent covariates and Cox proportional hazard models were used to determine the hazard rate of having a first major bleeding event. A total of 1028 person-years of exposure were observed from 255 patients with a median follow-up time of 3.6 yr. The incidence rate of major bleeding episodes was 2.5% per person-year. The incidence of major bleeding episodes was 3.1% per person-year of warfarin exposure, 4.4% per person-year of aspirin exposure, and 6.3% per person-year of exposure to the combination of warfarin and aspirin. Compared with patients who were not prescribed warfarin or aspirin, the multivariable hazard ratio for time to first major bleeding event was 3.59 for warfarin, 5.24 for aspirin, and 6.19 for the combination of aspirin and warfarin. The risk for major bleeding episodes in hemodialysis patients increases significantly while on aspirin and/or warfarin, although warfarin alone did not reach statistical significance. Future studies should evaluate the efficacy of these agents in the secondary prevention of cardiovascular events in this high-risk population.
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              Uremic bleeding: pathophysiology and clinical risk factors.

              Renal insufficiency appears clinically to be associated with a bleeding tendency. This has been documented in clinical settings including as a complication of medical interventions such as surgery and also in spontaneous bleeding events at gastrointestinal and intracranial sites. The pathophysiology that underlies this tendency appears to involve platelet dysfunction and an imbalance of mediators of normal endothelial function. It is also may be complicated by the co-morbidities in this population, such as vascular disease, hypertension and anemia, and the medical interventions required to treat such co-morbidities. This article reviews the evidence, the pathophysiology and the risk factors for increased bleeding in patients with chronic renal insufficiency.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Therapeutic Apheresis and Dialysis
                Ther Apher Dial
                Wiley
                17449979
                February 2014
                February 2014
                March 28 2013
                : 18
                : 1
                : 51-56
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Nursing; Far-Eastern Memorial Hospital; New Taipei City Taiwan
                [2 ]Division of Nephrology; Department of Medicine; Far-Eastern Memorial Hospital; New Taipei City Taiwan
                [3 ]Department of Medicine; National Taiwan University Hospital; Taipei Taiwan
                [4 ]Department of Pathology; Johns Hopkins University; Baltimore MD USA
                Article
                10.1111/1744-9987.12026
                24499084
                6a1a52f5-8336-46a1-9b88-336c62d3d4e0
                © 2013

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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