Best Care For Best Outcome

Caring For Your Access

Whether your access is a fistula, graft or catheter, you should make sure to take good care of it. Your dialysis care team will teach you the steps of good access care. The chart below gives you some general tips about everyday access care and how to prevent problems.

Fistula or Graft

  • Wash with an antibacterial soap each day, and always before dialysis.
  • Do not scratch your skin or pick scab.
  • Check for redness, a feeling of excess warmth or the beginning of a pimple on any area of your access.
  • Ask your dialysis care team to rotate the needles when you have your dialysis treatment.

Catheter

  • Keep catheter dressing clean and dry.
  • Make sure the area of the access is cleaned and the dressing is changed by your care team at each dialysis session.
  • Keep an emergency dressing kit at home in case you need to change your dressing between treatments.
  • Never open your catheter to the air.

Keeping Your Access Working

Your dialysis care team will check your access often to make sure it is working well. An access that is not working well can decrease the amount of dialysis you receive. Your dialysis care team will teach you how to check your fistula or graft at home each day. Here are some tips you should follow to help keep a fistula or graft working longer:

  1. Check the blood flow several times each day by feeling for a vibration, also called a pulse or thrill. If you do not feel this, or if there is a change, call your doctor or your dialysis center.
  2. Do not wear tight clothes or jewelry on your access arm.
  3. Do not carry anything heavy or do anything that would put pressure on the access.
  4. Do not sleep with your head on the arm that has your access.
  5. Do not let anyone use a blood pressure cuff on your access arm.
  6. Do not let anyone draw blood from your access arm.
  7. Do not be afraid to ask your dialysis care team to rotate needle sites.
  8. Apply only gentle pressure to the access site after the needle is removed. Too much pressure will stop the flow of blood through the access.
  9. If you have breakthrough bleeding after you have dialysis, apply gentle pressure to the needle site with a clean towel or gauze pad. If the bleeding does not stop in 30 minutes, call your doctor or your dialysis center.

If Access Problems Occur

Sometimes, even when you are very careful, your access may clot or become infected. If an infection occurs, your doctor will order antibiotics for you. If your access develops a clot, you may need to go to the hospital for treatment. Removing the clot can usually be done on an outpatient basis, and you will not need to stay overnight.

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