I have a graft. It's 8 years old, so it's really scarred up and has some lumps near the arterial anastomosis.I'm not fistuala material because my veins are too small, and they tend to disappear when they're punctured. If the nurse who starts an IV doesn't get it on the first try, they flatten out and it's a real nightmare trying to get a needle in.
My husband has the same problem with his veins rolling around. It's impossible to get an IV in him. He has two fistulas one in each arm. He got the first one right after he started dialysis and used it about 3 years before they figured out that it wasn't working properly. Despite the fact that he hasn't used it in a while it is still huge. The new one is much flatter and not as bumpy as the old one. Having the two fistulas makes blood pressure a nightmare, I don't think we will ever really know what his blood pressure is again.Stacey
...there is a Turkish chap in my unit whose fistula looks like a python that has wrapped itself around his arm in the middle of which you can see the two mice [mouses?] the python has just swallowed.He is immensely proud of it and shows it off to the customers in the Turkish restaurant he owns in London. I've suggested he submits it to the Guinness Book of Records.