1 / 21

Aortic Dissection & Aneurysm

Aortic Dissection & Aneurysm. Aortic Dissection Epidemiology. 2-3 x more common than aortic aneurysm rupture Male to Female (3:1) Mean age is 63 Incidence 3.5 per 100,000 Risk Factors: Systemic HTN (present in 70-90%)

gaille
Télécharger la présentation

Aortic Dissection & Aneurysm

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 Dissection & Aneurysm

  2. Aortic Dissection Epidemiology • 2-3 x more common than aortic aneurysm rupture • Male to Female (3:1) • Mean age is 63 • Incidence 3.5 per 100,000 • Risk Factors: • Systemic HTN (present in 70-90%) • Connective Tissue disorders (Ehlers-Danlos; Marfan’s; Lupus; Giant Cell Arteritis; Cystic Medial Necrosis) • Pregnancy (3rd Trimester) • Congenital Heart Disease (bicuspid aortic valve; coarctation) • Turner’s • Trauma • Aortic Valve Stenosis • ID: Syphilis, endocarditis • Drug: Tobacco; Cocaine; Methamphetamines

  3. Pathophysiology • Intimal tear that allows blood to leak through the media and adventitia • Propagation depends on BP and the pulse wave (rate of change in pressure/time) • High BP and rapid ventricular contractions = further migration

  4. Natural History • If untreated • 33% die within 24 hours • 50% die within 48 hours • >75% die within 2 weeks • 90% die within 3 months

  5. Classification • Debakey • Type I ascending aorta & part of distal aorta • Type II ascending aorta only • Type III descending aorta only • IIIa extension limited to diaphragm • IIIb continuation beyond diaphragm • Stanford • Type A: ascending aorta (debakey I & II) • Type B: descending aorta (debakey III)

  6. Clinical Presentation • Pain: most common symptom; usually aburpt, tearing/ripping, migrating, and maximal at onset • Pain & neurologic symptoms think dissection • Syncope (9%); decreased LOC (20%); Paraplegia (5%); Monoplegia (6%); Vision changes (2%) • Physical Exam: • 49% have absent or decreased pulses distal to dissection • Difference in BP (20mmHg between upper extremities or 30mmHg between upper and lower extremities) • 20% have new murmur (aortic insufficiency) • Signs of cardiac tamponade (Becks)

  7. Diagnosis • Chest Xray – normal in 11% • Mediastinal widening (>8cm) (63%) • Change in the aortic formation • Loss of A/P window • Eggshell sign: Extension of aortic shadow >3mm beyond calcified aortic wall • Blurred aortic knob • Lt. Pleural effusion (19%) • Double Density sign of the aorta • ECG • 20% showed evidence of ischemia • Varying AV blocks • Signs of LVH

  8. myweb.lsbu.ac.uk/dirt/museum/679-659.html www.mudphudder.com/2008/11/aortic-dissection/ Diagnosis

  9. Diagnosis • Transesophageal Echocardiography • Sensitivity & specificity nearly 100% • Can confirm diagnosis, define intimal tear site, aortic regurgitation, pericardial effusion, does not require IV contrast, performed in ED • Disadvantage: not readily available in all EDs • CT • Almost 100% sensitivity and specificity • Can confirm the diagnosis, define the extent of dissection, and distinguish between Type A and Type B • Disadvantage: patient leaves ED, requires IV contrast

  10. Treatment • All patients require 10-15 units of blood on stand-by and immediate thoracic surgery consultation • All initial treatment is medical • Decrease pulse rate and BP • Goal is systolic 100-120 mmHg & HR 50-60 • Esmolol gtts & Nitroprusside combination • Labetolol single agent • IV narcotics • Ascending require medical stabilization & then surgery • Descending require medical stabilization & monitoring

  11. Aortic Aneurysm Epidemiology • Defined as dilation of the abdominal aorta > 3cm and consists of all layer of the aorta • 15,000 deaths annually in the US • 97% occur between the renal arteries and inferior mesenteric artery • Clinically important aneurysms over 4 cm in diameter are present in about 1 percent of men between the ages of 55 and 64; the prevalence increases by 2 to 4 percent per decade thereafter • Smoking is the greatest risk factor for aneuryms (OR 5.07) & also aneurysm growth rate • 5 x more likely in men • CAD & PVD are significant risk factors • HTN is a small risk factor (OR 1.15) • 1st degree blood relative increases odds by 4.3-fold

  12. Pathogenesis • Combination of genetic, structural & metabolic factors • Genetic predisposition • Increased levels of elastase/collagnase • Loss of blood vessel elastin • Copper deficiency • Infection (mycotic aneurysms) • Inflammatory disorders • Local Mechanical forces

  13. Clinical Presentation • Non-ruptured are usually incidental findings • Two most common findings of recent expansion: abdominal/ back pain & tender to palpation (usually epigastric region) • Pulsatile & tender mass is highly suggestive of recent rupture (found in 77% of ruptures) • Bruits over aorta or femoral arteries • Unequal distal pulses • Presentation mimics numerous common ED diagnoses

  14. Diagnosis • sensitivity of physical examination for the detection of an abdominal aortic aneurysm ranges from 22 to 96 percent • Most non-ruptured aneurysms are incidental findings • Plan abdominal films: 75% have suspicious findings • Aneurysmal calcification, loss of renal shadow, soft tissue mass • Real-time ultrasonography is the preferred modality for screening and for assessing and following abdominal aortic aneurysms since the sensitivity approaches 100 percent, not good at detecting ruptures • CT with contrast: sensitivity around 100% and can detect rupture plus alternative diagnoses

  15. Fig. 58-2.

  16. Treatment • Mortality rate on elective repair 5% • Mortality rate on emergency repair of ruptured aneurysms 50% • Risk of Rupture (5 cm is the usual surgical cutoff) • Zero in aneurysms less than 4.0 cm in diameter • 0.5 to 5 percent for those 4.0 to 4.9 cm in diameter • 3 to 15 percent for those 5.0 to 5.9 cm in diameter • 10 to 20 percent for those 6.0 to 6.9 cm in diameter • 20 to 40 percent for those 7.0 to 7.9 cm in diameter • 30 to 50 percent for those ≥8.0 cm in diameter

  17. Treatment • Indications for surgical intervention • Patients with symptomatic aneurysms should undergo repair, regardless of aneurysm diameter. • Early repair may be beneficial in patients whose aneurysm increases ≥0.5 cm in diameter in six months. • Repair of suprarenal and/or thoracoabdominal aneurysms involves more extensive surgery and greater operative risk. Repair of such aneurysms may be beneficial at diameters >5.5 to 6.0 cm in diameter. • ED treatment • If suspected rupture • Two large bore Ivs • Type & Cross 10 units • Order ECG • Obtain immediate vascular surgery consultation

  18. Questions

More Related