I was reading that the radial artery has a normal flow rate of 20-30 ml/min, but when an anastomosis is formed by connection to the cephalic vein the flow rate jumps initially to 200-300 ml/min. When the fistula is mature, the flow rate further increases to 600-1200 ml/min.This must have an impact on the heart because the resting blood flow rate is ~5000 ml/min at rest. The fact that over 50% of deaths of ESRD patients are attributable to cardiac causes suggests that the impact is adverse. Nevertheless, an AV fistula is considered the gold standard for access. As I see it, there are two possibilities, viz: 1) The extra work on the heart strengthens it, so, like exercise, it makes you better off or2) The extra work puts a load on the heart that makes an adverse cardiac event more likely.I've no idea which is the right answer. I can't find anything that answers this question. Any views?
Wow!! hadnt thought on this one before... So, how do we find out how fast it is in ours???