4.1 Article

An eighth note

Journal

PERFUSION-UK
Volume 38, Issue 1, Pages 200-202

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/02676591211040945

Keywords

hemodialysis; arteriovenous fistula; vascular patency; collateral circulation; regional blood flow

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This article reports the angiographic examination results of a chronic hemodialysis patient, in which a unique collateral venous branch sign resembling an eighth note was noted before the stenotic lesion. After percutaneous transluminal angioplasty, the eighth note sign attenuated significantly. The eighth note sign is not commonly seen and represents a specific vascular morphology.
Venous stenosis is the most common cause of arteriovenous fistula (AVF) failure in hemodialysis patients. For patients with AVF stenosis, the pressure over the antecedent part of the AVF stenotic lesion will increase if arterial inflow is sufficient. We report a chronic hemodialysis patient who received an angiographic examination for the juxta-anastomosis stenosis of his AVF. A unique feature of a collateral venous branch antecedent to the stenotic lesion was noted, resembling a musical sign as the eighth note. After percutaneous transluminal angioplasty, the eighth note attenuated markedly at once. Of note, the eighth note sign is not seen frequently, and thus we postulate that the formation of an eighth note sign on the radiocephalic fistula should fulfill the following requirements, including a sufficient arterial inflow, an adjacent collateral branch close enough to the arteriovenous anastomosis, a severe juxta-anastomotic stenotic lesion, and an intact ulnar venous drainage system.

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