Thank you both for such quick responses! Any and all information is really helpful for me to try and get my head around this. I feel like the combined knowledge of this group is such a great resource! (thanks again Epoman, if you hadn't started this site, I would have been just a person in a 30 chair dialysis unit relying on a couple of doctors, some overworked techs & nurses and google!)
His access works fine for a while and then goes batty.
He does Nx Stage home hemo now. Since his upper arm is ready to use, he is going to go to the dialysis center, have his nurse put the needles in, flush and then cap off. He'll go home and immediately jump on his machine. Only bummer part about it is, he has to go back to 17 needles and slowly work back up to 15.
Can they put a new fistula in? Is that an option?
That sounds really familiar. I clot quickly as well, then of course, I bleed like crazy because of the heparin. I'm still on 15's and my access is "like a garden hose". One surgeon suggested a graft, but with my clotting, a graft could be even more trouble. I am hoping that we can nurse this fistula along until I get a transplant. Hopefully in the fall when I am on on home hemo, if I go low and slow daily it will be ok. I really don't want a new fistula. I've had this one for two years now, and using it for six months - I just feel like we're missing something and it should be working... Your husband's dialysis routine sounds like a lot of work, hopefully his fistula will mature and all will be well! I'm jealous that he is able to dialize at home - I am impatient!!!
What they are is doing for it, is using the arterial on the fistula and her cath for the blood return. They claim in time the fistula will mature enough to overcome the pressure issues.
That is what we do now. I use the fistula for a couple of hours, we wait through 5 alarms, then we swap the arterial line to the cath as a return, and we pull from the venous side of the fistula. (it sounds backwards, but it makes sense, as I am prone to sudden infiltrations ) - What is crazy is that for 4 months, I dialized without a problem, running pump speeds of 500. It has only been since late April that we've been having pressure problems. Originally, the perm cath was placed because we had too many infiltrations. (don't get me started - I was going to start learning to cannulate myself, and establish button holes, but we can't do that now because of the arterial pressure drops)