1 / 24

Aortic Aneurysms

Aortic Aneurysms. Mark A. Farber, MD. Aortic Aneurysms Incidence. 30-60/1000 Increasing incidence over past 3 decades Incidence of AAA Autopsy 1.5-3.0% U/S Screening 3.2% Pts with CAD 5.0% Pts with PVD 10.0% Pts with femoral and pop.aneurysms 50.0%.

carter
Télécharger la présentation

Aortic Aneurysms

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Aortic Aneurysms Mark A. Farber, MD

  2. Aortic AneurysmsIncidence • 30-60/1000 • Increasing incidence over past 3 decades Incidence of AAA Autopsy 1.5-3.0% U/S Screening 3.2% Pts with CAD 5.0% Pts with PVD 10.0% Pts with femoral and pop.aneurysms 50.0%

  3. Aortic AneurysmsDefinition • Pseudoaneurysm • True Aneurysm

  4. Definitions • Aneurysm - Increase in diameter of 50% (1.5x) its normal diameter – Focal region • Ectasia - Diffuse dilatation of an artery with increase in diameter >50% • Arteriomegaly - Diffuse enlargement of an artery, but not lg. Enough to meet criteria for an aneurysm

  5. Aortic AneurysmsAssociated Aneurysms • Iliac - 41% • Femoro-popliteal - 15% • Pts with unilateral popliteal aneurysms-->8% AAA • Pts with bilateral popliteal aneurysms--> 30%-50% AAA

  6. Aortic AneurysmsAssociated Medical Conditions • Carotid Artery Stenosis - 10% have AAA • Smoker:Nonsmoker - 8:1 • Male:Female - 4:1 • HTN - 40% of pts with AAA have HTN

  7. Aortic AneurysmsEtiology • Atherosclerosis • Cystic Medial Necrosis • Dissection • Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome • Syphilis • Familial Associated • Lysyl Oxidase deficiency

  8. Aortic AneurysmsEtiology • Decrease in elastin and collagen in arterial wall • Elastin becomes fragmented-->arterial elongation and dilatation • Increase in the collagenase and elastase activity

  9. Aortic AneurysmsEtiology Multifactorial

  10. Aortic AneurysmsPhysics • Laplace’s Law T = P x R T - Tension P - Pressure R - Radius

  11. Aortic AneurysmsClinical Presentation • Asymptomatic - 70-75% • Symptoms: • Early satiety, N,V • Abd., Flank, or Back pain • 1/3 of pts experience abd. And flank pain • Abrupt onset of pain -->Rupture or expansion of aneurysm

  12. Aortic AneurysmsRuptured Aneurysms • Small tear-> pain, followed by frank rupture • Usually occurs postero-laterally • Can rupture in Vena Cava creating Aorto-Caval Fistula • Occasionally can rupture anterior - usually fatal

  13. Ruptured AneurysmThumbnail Sketch • 60-70 y/o who presents with c/o abd pain, hypotension and a pulsatile abdominal mass

  14. Aortic AneurysmsDiagnosis • Physical Exam: • If <5cm in diameter, then cannot be detected by routine physical exam • Radiographs: • Calcified wall. Can determine size in 2/3 • Cannot rule out and AAA

  15. Aortic AneurysmsDiagnosis • Arteriography: • Cannot determine aneurysm size because of mural thrombus • Indications for obtaining arteriography • Suspicion of visceral ischemia • Occlusive disease of iliac and femoral arteries • Severe HTN, or impair renal function • ? Horseshoe Kidney • Suprarenal of TAAA component • Femoro-Popliteal Aneurysms

  16. Aortic AneurysmsDiagnosis • Ultrasound • Establishes diagnosis easily • Accurately measures infrarenal diameter • Difficult to visualize thoracic or suprarenal aneurysms • Difficult to establish relationship to renal arteries • Technician dependent • Widely available, quick, no risk, cheap

  17. Aortic AneurysmsCT Scan • Very reliable and reproducible • Can image entire aorta • Can visualize relation ship to visceral vessels • Longer to obtain and is more costly than U/S • Most useful • Requires contrast agent - renal toxicity

  18. Aortic AneurysmsMRA • Now widely available • More expensive than CT • No contrast agent required • Spacial resolution less than CT

  19. Aortic AneurysmsRisks • Complications of AAA • Thrombosis • Distal embolization • Rupture 23.4% of aneurysms 4-5 cm will rupture

  20. Aortic AneurysmsRupture Risks • Patients with COPD and HTN have increased risk of rupture • Rate of enlargement: • 0.5 cm/ year • Survival • 50% die prior to reaching hospital, and an additional 24% prior to repair.

  21. Aortic AneurysmsTreatment Risks • Mortality • 0.9 - 5% with current surgical techniques • Morbidity • 5-10% usually associated with cardiac events • Endovascular Techniques are significantly reducing morbidity and mortality associated with repair

  22. Aortic AneurysmsIndications for Treatment • Presence of an infrarenal aneurysm > 5cm without associated co-morbid medical conditions • Repair smaller aneurysms if rate of enlargement is greater than expected • Repair all symptomatic aneurysms • If co-morbid conditions exist wait until risk of repair and rupture are equal (approx. 6 cm)

  23. Aortic AneurysmsTreatment-Surgical • Standard Surgical Repair • Replace diseased aorta with artificial artery • Requires 7 day hospital stay • Recovery time 3-6 months • Proven method with good long term results

  24. Aortic AneurysmsTreatment - Endovascular • Repair through an incision in the groin with expandable prosthesis under fluoroscopic guidance • Requires both surgical and radiological assistance • Significantly reduced m+m • Long tern result unknown • Hospital stay 2 days, Recovery time 1-2 weeks

More Related