Endovascular management of renal transplant dysfunction secondary to hemodynamic effects related to ipsilateral femoral arteriovenous graft
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    Interventional Radiology - Technical Note
    P: 193-195
    March 2016

    Endovascular management of renal transplant dysfunction secondary to hemodynamic effects related to ipsilateral femoral arteriovenous graft

    Diagn Interv Radiol 2016;22(2):193-195
    1. Department of Interventional Radiology, Jackson Memorial Hospital/University of Miami Hospital, Miami, Florida, USA
    2. Department of Radiology, Jackson Memorial Hospital/University of Miami Hospital, Miami, Florida, USA
    3. Department of Surgery, Jackson Memorial Hospital/University of Miami Hospital, Miami, Florida, USA
    No information available.
    No information available
    Received Date: 24.06.2015
    Accepted Date: 02.09.2015
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    ABSTRACT

    Hemodialysis access options become complex in long-term treatment for patients with renal disease, while awaiting renal transplantation (RT). Once upper extremity sites are exhausted, lower extremities are used. RT is preferably in the contralateral iliac fossa, rarely ipsilateral. In current literature, RT dysfunction secondary to the hemodynamic effects of an ipsilateral femoral arteriovenous graft (AVG) has been rarely described. To our knowledge, AVG ligation is the only published technique for hemodynamic correction of an ipsilateral AVG. We present a simple, potentially reversible endovascular approach to manage the hemodynamic effects of an AVG, without potentially permanently losing future AVG access.

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