# Case Report: Maintaining a balance between vascular access patency and stable dissection status in a hemodialysis patient with unrepaired type A aortic dissection

**Authors:** Qiquan Lai, Ling Chen, Xuejing Gao, Hongtao Tie, Ziming Wan

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fcvm.2025.1561645 · Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine · 2025-03-24

## TL;DR

A hemodialysis patient with an unrepaired aortic dissection successfully managed anticoagulant use to balance dialysis access and dissection stability.

## Contribution

Demonstrates a feasible anticoagulant dosage strategy for hemodialysis in patients with unrepaired type A aortic dissection.

## Key findings

- Using 2,000 units of LMWH per dialysis session prevented catheter occlusion without dissection rupture.
- The patient maintained stable dissection status and dialysis access patency for 25 months.
- Low-dose LMWH improved dialysis outcomes while avoiding dissection complications.

## Abstract

Type A aortic dissection (AD) is a lethal situation with high mortality within short time after onset. We present here a rare hemodialysis patient whose condition was comorbid with unrepaired type A AD. The challenge we face is whether low-molecular-weight heparin (LMWH) should be used during dialysis.

A 72-year-old man with a history of hemodialysis for 2 years and 7 months sought medical attention due to thrombosis of the dialysis catheter. He had been diagnosed with an unrepaired type A aortic dissection (involving the aortic root, the ascending aorta, the aortic arch, the descending aorta, the abdominal aorta, the left common iliac artery, and the femoral artery) for more than 5 years. LMWH was not given during the previous dialysis process because of concerns about the rupture of the dissection. The lesion was salvaged via urokinase thrombolysis. However, the anticoagulant-free dialysis pattern occasionally caused dialyzer clotting and further increased the risk of catheter dysfunction. The patient repeatedly experienced dysfunction of the catheter in the following 8 months, with 2 episodes resolved via thrombolysis and 2 episodes replaced with new catheters. Finally, LMWH was used for each dialysis session to prevent thrombosis, with the dosage gradually increasing from 1,000 units to 2,000 units. The dosage of 2,000 units could support sufficient 4-hour dialysis for each session. Twenty-five months have passed since then, the patient has not experienced any further occlusion of the catheter, and the aortic dissection has not shown obvious changes (neither obvious expansion nor rupture).

Reducing the dosage of LMWH during hemodialysis is a feasible solution to maintain a balance between hemodialysis access patency and stable dissection status in this particular patient.

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

16 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11973362/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11973362