View clinical trials related to Dialysis Access Malfunction.
Filter by:The continued access study of the InterGraft Venous Anastomotic Connector (Venous InterGraft Continued Access Study, or 'VIG-CAS') allows for continued enrollment of subjects while the marketing application is being prepared and subsequently reviewed by FDA. The VIG-CAS will include the same patient population, follow-up schedule, and study endpoints as the VIG pivotal study.
Cannulation of complex arteriovenous fistula (AVF) or graft (AVG) is a challenge to renal nurses. Ultrasound (US) guidance on central and peripheral venous access visualisation has been widely adopted in nephrology and shown to reduce complications of vascular interventions. With broader adoption of handheld US devices in clinical services, renal nurses could acquire this point-of-care technique to increase the successful cannulation rate while facilitating confidence build-up during training and practice. We aim to evaluate the use of handheld US on difficult AVF/AVG cannulation in a hospital-based dialysis unit.
There will be two phases of this study. The phases of this study may occur simultaneously. In Phase I, eligible subjects will be asked to acutely wear the Alio Medical RMS SmartPatch during regularly scheduled dialysis sessions. Subjects will have a pre- and post-dialysis blood draw(s), vitals collected, and monitoring throughout the dialysis sessions. The SmartPatch will be removed from the location(s) where it is placed following the post-dialysis blood draw. In Phase II, subjects will be asked to wear a SmartPatch for up to 90 days. Subjects will be trained on the use of the Alio Medical RMS and be provided a system for them to utilize at home. Patches will be changed at a minimum of once every 7 days.
To determine if cutting balloon angioplasty combined with DEB angioplasty provides a higher primary patency after treatment of recurrent stenoses compared with cutting balloon angioplasty or angioplasty using DEB alone in the venous outflow AVFs. For cutting balloon angioplasty in venous stenosis, the primary patency after 12 months is 55-60% (9,16) and in recurrent stenoses up to 48%(10). We hypothesise that DEB angioplasty after cutting balloon angioplasty leads to improved primary patency at 12 months.
For patients with End Stage Renal Failure (ESRF), the surgical creation of an Autogenous Arteriovenous Fistula (AVF) or Autogenous Arteriovenous Graft (AVG) is the recognised standard for providing vascular access. A functioning dialysis vascular access is essential to facilitate hemodialysis (HD) treatment. Advantages include improved hemodialysis initiation time, improved dialysis quality, better maintenance of accesses and generally, better outcomes in patients. Unfortunately almost 50% of AVF and AVG fail after a median lifetime of 3 to 7 years and 12 to 18 months respectively. Vascular access dysfunction is a major cause of morbidity and hospitalisation for ESRF patients, costing the healthcare system USD 18 million globally. Venous stenosis and scarring are caused by trauma from surgical access creation when the circuit comes arterialized and from repeated percutaneous punctures from subsequent hemodialysis. This study is performed to evaluate Sirolimus-coated balloon efficacy and safety using MagicTouchâ„¢ Drug coated balloon catheter (Concept Medical Inc, Tampa, FL, US) on AVF patency with de novo and recurrent stenosis.
This is a multicenter, prospective study investigating a new concept of intra-procedural percutaneous duplex ultrasound (DUS) volume flow-guided balloon angioplasty for the quantification and optimization of endovascular treatment outcomes of dysfunctional autologous arteriovenous fistulae (AVF).
This is a pilot study investigating a new concept of intra-procedural percutaneous duplex ultrasound (DUS) volume flow-guided balloon angioplasty for the quantification and optimization of endovascular treatment outcomes of dysfunctional autologous arteriovenous fistulae (AVF).