For more info visit www.newsinfusion.com March 11, 2010 – As the US population ages and the incidence of diabetes and high blood pressure rises, the number of end-stage renal (kidney) disease patients receiving dialysis is expected to increase dramatically in coming years. Kidney dialysis is a life-saving treatment, with one major problem: it requires repeated medical procedures to unclog blood vessels or it stops working. And once patients run out of dialysis access sites due to blockages, their only option is a transplant with a long waiting list. Chronic kidney disease is the ninth leading cause of death in the US But for the 500000 people on dialysis or living with a transplanted kidney, and those people who may be at risk, a new treatment could extend the time kidney dialysis patients can be treated with dialysis before needing a kidney transplant. In dialysis, veins that support the procedure cannot do so over the long term. They collapse and need to be opened, typically with balloon angioplasty, similar to the procedure commonly done for the heart. A new advancement in the form of a stent graft for these veins could become the new gold-standard in treatment and dialysis. Dr. Ziv Haskal, chief of vascular and interventional radiology division at University of Maryland Medical Center, was principal investigator for a study on the new therapy published in The New England Journal of Medicine. Dr. Haskal will be available for interviews on March 10, 2010 to talk to your …
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