470 likes | 608 Views
ANNA Jersey North Chapter 126 Patient Care Technician Certification Review. Dialysis Access September 13, 2009 Alice Hellebrand MSN, RN, CNN, CURN ANNA Northeast Chapter Coordinator Renal Educator-Holy Name Hospital. Access for Hemodialysis. AVF-arterio-venous fistula
E N D
ANNA Jersey North Chapter 126Patient Care Technician Certification Review Dialysis Access September 13, 2009 Alice Hellebrand MSN, RN, CNN, CURN ANNA Northeast Chapter Coordinator Renal Educator-Holy Name Hospital
Access for Hemodialysis • AVF-arterio-venous fistula • AVG-arterio-venous graft • Catheter-temporary or permanent
Dialysis Accesses • The Fistula is the patient’s own natural vein that has been attached to a near-by artery via an anastomosis. • It takes 1-3 months for an AVF to mature and become strong enough to use a large gauge needle and achieve quality BFRs.
Dialysis Accesses • An anastomosis is a surgical connection. In a vascular access, the anastomosis is the spot where a vein and artery are joined to form a fistula, or where the artificial vein is joined to the patient’s artery and vein for a graft. Dialysis needles should not be inserted into the area of the anastomosis.
Dialysis Accesses • Pros • The AVF is the ‘GOLD Standard’ for hemodialysis accesses. • It lasts longer • Has fewer infections • Has fewer complications like rejection, stenosis, and clotting.
Dialysis Accesses • Cons • The main disadvantage is that the AVF takes 4-6 weeks to mature and sometimes longer. • Some fistula fail to mature at all, but it is not often. • Side veins off of the AVF (accessory veins) can reduce pressure in the fistula causing it to fail. • The chosen vessel may be too small (<2mm) and unable to develop.
Assessing a Fistula • Look for signs of infection • Look for signs that the surgical wound/suture line has healed • Feel the thrill • Listen for the bruit • Feel the diameter of the vessel • After one week, apply a tourniquet and feel for firmness..can I get a needle in there
Assessing the Fistula • Assess for signs of infection • Redness • Drainage • Increased warmth • Bleeding from venipuncture site
Dialysis Accesses • Always start with a 17 gauge fistula needle. • The fistula needle gauge can decrease (as needle gauges get smaller-the diameter of the needle shaft gets larger) after the fistula becomes fully mature. • This allows for increases BFRs.
I’m going to cannulate • WASH HANDS!! WEAR PPE!!! • Prepare the patients site • Alcohol • Betadine (providone iodine) • Chlora-prep (chlorhexidine gluconate • Exsept (sodium hypochlorite
Dialysis Accesses • How far must you stick away from an anastomosis? • Two finger breadths from the anastomosis
Dialysis Accesses • When might you need to use a tourniquet on a fistula?
Apply a Tourniquet • ALWAYS • Allows you to see the fistula • Holds it in place • Gives you a better “feel” • Apply tourniquet as far away from site as you can • They should not be so tight that they cause pain, tingling or cut off blood flow to fingers • ONLY USED FOR CANNULATION!!
Dialysis Accesses • What is the correct angle for needle insertion of a fistula?
Dialysis Accesses • 25-30 degree angle. • Why do we need to use a different needle insertion degree angle from what is used on a graft?
Dialysis Accesses • The 25-30 degree angle is a more shallow cannulation entry into the fistula. • This technique is performed to prevent cannulating through the Fistula causing an infiltration.
Cannulation Techniques • Rope ladder • Also called rotating sites • Sites are rotated to prevent aneurysms or weak spots in the wall of the vessel • Buttonhole or constant site • Remove scabs • Dull needles after site is established
Easing the Pain • Tighten the skin during cannulation= less pain • Lidocaine injection • Ethyl chloride spray- feels cold on skin • Topical Anesthetics • EMLA cream • Less-n-pain (over the counter)
Fistula Complications • Infection • Never cannulate • Drainage, redness • Line separation • Tape needles securely • Fasten the blood lines • Set arterial and venous pressure monitor limits • TURN OFF BLOODPUMP and CLAMP THE BLOODLINES
Recirculation • Arterial and venous blood mixes • Blood flows within the AVF is lower than that in the dialyzer • Needles placed to close together • Lines are reversed • Stenosis is present • Place needles in the correct position • Keep the tips of the arterial and venous needle at least 1.5 inches apart
Fistula Complications • Air Embolism • Can cause cardiac arrest • Signs and symptoms • Anxious feeling • Trouble breathing • Cyanotic • Vision problems • Low blood pressure • Confused, paralyzed or unconscious
Fistula Complications • Most common complication • Infiltration/Hematoma • Tip of needle goes into the vein, out the other side or nick the side of the vessel • Causes pain, bruising, additional cannulation and lack of trust in staff • Infiltrated arterial needle-arterial pressure becomes more negative • Infiltrated venous needle-raise in venous pressure and will stop the blood pump
Fistula Complications • Thrombosis • Formation of blood clots
Dialysis Accesses • High Output Cardiac Failure • What causes this condition to occur in a patient with an AVF?
Dialysis Accesses • The fistula brings more blood to the heart. • The heart works harder, reducing resistance in the arteries. • Arterial blood pressure falls. • The drop in arterial blood pressure triggers the renin-angiotension system.
Dialysis Accesses • Patients with High Output Cardiac Failure may have rapid pulses as their hearts try to make up for the extra blood flow (20% or >) caused by the AVF access. • They may be SOB, have swelling in their hands and feet (because return circulation to the heart is poor). • Some patients may have chest pain if the BFR is too high during their treatment.
Dialysis Accesses • What is an arteriovenous graft (AVG) ?
Dialysis Accesses • An AVG is an artificial blood vessel used to connect an artery and a vein. • There are many types of materials that can be used for AVGs. • These materials can be divided into biologic and synthetic materials.
Dialysis Accesses • Biologic Materials • Human and animal materials have been used for AVGs, but are rarely used today • Human AVGs were made from a vein from the patient's leg • Veins from the umbilical cords of newborn infants were also used, but had a high rate of infection and aneurysms
Dialysis Accesses • Examples of a human graft materials that have been used for AVGs.
Dialysis Accesses • Bovine (cow) and Ovine (sheep) carotid arteries are also used for grafts and must be treated to remove proteins that would cause the human body to reject them. • These biologic grafts can also have a high rate of infection and aneurysms.
Dialysis Accesses • Can you name any of the synthetic types of materials used for AVGs?
Dialysis Accesses • ePTFE (polytetrafluoroethylene) Grafts • Venaflo – combines the ePTFE material with the well known material properties of IMPRA Carboflo vascular graft to reduce platelet adhesion (clotting). • Carboflo – In pre-clinic studies, Carboflo’s are Carbon lined to significantly decreases platelet accumulation by as much as 6 times greater than standard ePTFE grafts. • Distaflo – Used mainly for arterial bypass grafts and is shown to improve patency of the graft over other materials.
Examples of ePTFE grafts Distaflo - upper left Venaflo – right Impra Carboflo – lower left Dialysis Accesses
Dialysis Accesses • The AVG is has two anastomosis’ because it is surgically attached to both the artery and vein. • The Graft can be straight, looped, or curved.
Dialysis Accesses • What is the correct angel degree for cannulating an AVG?
Dialysis Accesses • Cannulate AVGs at a 45 degree angle. • Why does it matter what angel we cannulate an AVG and an AVF?
Dialysis Accesses • AVG’s cannulation insertion is a steeper angle to prevent unnecessary increased puncture size and tearing of the graft material during needle insertion. • AVF’s on the other hand, need a lower angle to prevent the needle tip from puncturing through the other side of the fistula which could cause a serious infiltration and potential damage to the fistula.
Dialysis Accesses • Pros • The AVG takes about 2 weeks to heal and be ready for cannulation. • Graft size and blood flows don’t depend on maturation. • Grafts can start out with larger gauge needles and obtain better BFRs sooner. • The AVG is a good access for those patients who cannot maintain a fistula.
Dialysis Accesses • Cons • The biggest problems with all grafts are infection and thrombosis. • Grafts are more likely to develop stenosis than AVFs. • Grafts are more likely to clot than AVFs. • Grafts have an increased risk of infection over the AVF.
Central Venous Catheters • Long term • Tunneled, cuffed catheter • Short term • Urgent dialysis
Catheters • Pros • Can be used immediately • Hidden under clothing • Hands and arms can be moved freely • No needles
Catheters • Cons • Increase risk of infection • Foreign body can cause inflammation and clotting • Lower blood flows decreased adequacy
Care of the patient with a catheter • Assess • Site • Patient • Catheter limbs • First choice • Chlorahexidine • Betadine
Continuous Quality Improvement (CQI) • Identify Improvement is Needed • Analyze the Process • Choose a team • Review the data • Find the reason the problem occurred • Identify trends • Identify the root causes • What is the exact cause of the problem • Define the problem
Implement PDCA Cycle PLAN DO CHECK ACT