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.
We conducted a prospective randomised controlled study from January 2021 to January 2022. Ten renal nurses were trained by an interventional nephrologist before patient recruitment and had completed a pre- and post-training questionnaire on their confidence level. Fifty haemodialysis patients with complex AVF were randomised to US-guided or conventional cannulation. The total time spent on cannulation and patients' pain scores were also collected.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
50
Handheld US-guided AVF/AVG cannulation
Allen Liu
Singapore, Singapore
percentage of successful cannulation
Time frame: from skin contact to actual start of dialysis
pre-cannulation assessment time
time taken to assess the AVF/AVG with either US or clinical examination before cannulation
Time frame: from patient physical contact to the time before needling thru skin
cannulation time
Time frame: skin contact by needle to succesful aspiration of blood from needle
patients' pain score
10cm visual analogue scale
Time frame: needle to skin to end of dialysis session
complications
need for a temporary central venous catheter, single-needle dialysis, or infiltration (e.g. haematoma) that hastened the use of AVF/AVG for the same dialysis session
Time frame: from skin contact to actual start of dialysis
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