🩸 Anatomy - Plumbing for Purity
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Access Types & Preference:
- Arteriovenous Fistula (AVF): Direct artery-to-vein anastomosis. Best patency, lowest infection rate.
- Arteriovenous Graft (AVG): Synthetic tube connecting artery and vein.
- Central Venous Catheter (CVC): Tunneled catheter (e.g., Permacath). Highest infection risk; used for immediate/temporary access.
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Common AVF Sites (Distal to Proximal):
- Radiocephalic (Brescia-Cimino): Radial artery & cephalic vein.
- Brachiocephalic: Brachial artery & cephalic vein.
⭐ Rule of 6s for AVF Maturation: A usable fistula should be:
- Flow > 600 mL/min
- Diameter > 6 mm
- Depth < 6 mm from skin
- Matures in ~6 weeks
📌 Mnemonic: "Fistula First" - the preferred primary access.

💉 Clinical - The Access Trinity
📌 Fistula > Graft > Catheter. Choice depends on urgency and vessel quality.
- AV Fistula (AVF): Gold standard; direct artery-vein connection (e.g., radiocephalic).
- Pros: Best long-term patency, lowest infection/thrombosis risk.
- Cons: Requires ~2-3 months to mature; potential for steal syndrome.
- AV Graft (AVG): Synthetic (PTFE) tube connects artery to vein.
- Pros: Usable sooner (2-4 weeks); for patients with inadequate veins.
- Cons: Higher thrombosis, stenosis, and infection risk than AVF.
- CVC: Tunneled catheter for temporary/bridge access.
- Pros: Immediate use.
- Cons: ⚠️ Highest infection risk (S. aureus bacteremia), central venous stenosis.
⭐ The most common cause of AVF/AVG failure is thrombosis, typically due to stenosis at the venous anastomosis. Loss of a palpable thrill or audible bruit is a key sign.
💔 Complications - When Lifelines Fail
- Thrombosis: Most common cause of access failure.
- Sx: Sudden loss of thrill/bruit.
- Tx: Pharmacomechanical thrombectomy or surgical thrombectomy.
- Stenosis: Typically at the venous anastomosis.
- Sx: ↑ venous pressures during dialysis, prolonged bleeding post-cannulation, limb swelling.
- Dx: Duplex US; fistulogram is gold standard.
- Tx: Balloon angioplasty ± stenting.
- Infection: Risk: Catheter > Graft (AVG) > Fistula (AVF).
- Pathogen: S. aureus is most common.
- Tx: IV antibiotics; may require graft excision for AVG infection.
- Dialysis Access Steal Syndrome (DASS):
- Patho: Ischemia distal to access due to shunting of arterial blood.
- Sx: Pain (especially with exertion/dialysis), pallor, paresthesias, cool digits.
- Aneurysm/Pseudoaneurysm:
- Cause: High flow, repeated needle sticks weaken the wall.
- Tx: Surgical repair if symptomatic, rapidly expanding, or skin erosion.
⭐ New-onset hand pain, numbness, and coolness after AV fistula creation is classic for Dialysis Access Steal Syndrome (DASS).

🔧 Management - Salvage Operations
- Goal: Preserve existing access & avoid new access creation.
- Primary Interventions: Endovascular approaches are first-line.
- Thrombectomy: For clotted access. Can be percutaneous (pharmacomechanical) or open surgical.
- Angioplasty (PTA): Balloon dilation for stenosis. Stents used for elastic recoil or recurrent lesions.
- Surgical Revisions:
- Anastomotic revision/Interposition graft: For complex stenosis or aneurysmal changes.
- Banding/DRIL: For dialysis-associated steal syndrome to ↓ flow.
⭐ The most common site of stenosis in an AV fistula is the venous outflow tract, just distal to the anastomosis.
⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- AV fistula (AVF) is the preferred access: best patency, lowest infection/thrombosis rates.
- AVFs require ~6-8 weeks to mature ("Rule of 6s"); grafts are usable in ~2-3 weeks.
- Stenosis and thrombosis are the most common complications of AVF/AVG, often at the venous anastomosis.
- Central venous catheters have the highest risk of infection (S. aureus) and central vein stenosis.
- Dialysis steal syndrome causes distal limb ischemia (pain, pallor) after access creation.
- High-output heart failure is a rare complication from excessive shunting through large, proximal access.
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