Calciphylaxis is a devastating diagnosis, most commonly seen in patients with End Stage Renal Disease.
In Calciphylaxis, the small arteries becomes thickened due to hardened calcium deposition. As a result, blood flow is impaired and the tissues supplied by these vessels die. Large areas of skin become mottled-purple in color, painful and red, and eventually necrose or die, leading to large ulcerations.
The underling cause of calciphylaxis is unknown, but abnormal deposition of minerals in the blood vessel walls, leading to thickened, blocked blood vessels is seen on biopsy specimens.
The articles in the table below discuss the association between calciphylaxis and end stage renal failure and hemodialysis patients.
Calciphylaxis in Hemodialysis Patients and End Stage Renal Disease ESRD
Zasuwa G, Frinak S, Besarab A, Peterson E, Yee J.
Division of Nephrology and Hypertension, Department of Internal Medicine, Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, Michigan.
Although monitoring of vascular accesses by physical examination is nearly as sensitive as surveillance measurements by vascular access pressure when performed by examiners, the frequency of examinations is limited by time.
We developed intravascular access pressure surveillance as a surrogate to physical examination. Using real-time data from hemodialysis machines, we derived intravascular access pressure ratios for each dialytic procedure. An automated, noninvasive surveillance algorithm that generated a "warning" list of patients at risk for thrombosis was formulated.
We hypothesized that this algorithm would reduce access thrombosis frequency. We designed a study comparing thrombosis rates during a baseline 6-month interval to three subsequent 6-month periods of active surveillance.
Referrals for interventions during this 18-month period were based on persistently abnormal elevated vascular access pressure ratio tests (VAPRT) >0.55.
Thrombosis rates declined progressively for arteriovenous grafts (AVG) during the intervention period compared with the baseline period.
Arteriovenous fistula (AVF) thrombosis rates decreased during postintervention months 13-18 during employment of the VAPRT.
We conclude that use of VAPRT can reduce thrombosis rates in vascular accesses, and the magnitude of the effect is larger and more consistent in arteriovenous grafts (AVGs) than autologous AVFs.
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