Aneurysms Flashcards
1
Q
Definition of aneurysms
A
localised abnormal dilation of a blood vessel or heart
can be saccular or fusiform
2
Q
True vs false aneurysms
A
- true aneurysm - intact attenuated vessel/heart wall
- false aneurysm - defect in vessel wall with extravascular hematoma that communicates with the intravascular space
3
Q
Causes of aneurysms (7)
A
- Atherosclerosis
- Tertiary syphilis
- Cystic medial necrosis (dissecting)
- Polyarteritis nodosa
- Trauma
- Congenital defect (berry)
- Infections
4
Q
Pathogenesis of aneurysms
A
- Weakening of vessel wall
- Loss of elasticity & contractility due to deficiency in media
- Poor intrinsic quality of vascular wall connective tissue
- Collagen degradation by local inflammation
5
Q
Effects of aneurysms
A
- Pressure on surrounding structures
- Thromboembolism - disruption of laminar flow
- Occlusion of branch vessels - ischemia
- Rupture with haemorrhage
- Cardiac disease - in thoracic aortic aneurysm - dilation of aortic valve - aortic insufficiency
6
Q
Features of berry aneurysms
A
- small berry-like saccular aneurysms in the Circle of Willis, 90% in ant circulation
- found in 2% of population, multiple in 20-30%
- rupture - subarachnoid hemorrhage
- idiopathic w associated genetic & predisposing factors
7
Q
Features of dissecting aneurysm
A
- blood enters arterial wall, splays apart laminar planes of media to form a blood filled channel within the vessel wall, dissects between its layers
- found in 40-60y men w htn (90%), young patients w connective tissue abnormalities affecting the aorta (eg Marfan’s) or due to iatrogenic factors (surgery, catheterisation)
8
Q
Pathogenesis of aortic dissection
A
- Intimal tear/rupture of vasa vasorum
- Hemorrhage occurs in between middle & outer third of media
- Tear is usually in the ascending aorta, may dissect retrograde towards heart of distally
- May rupture internally (back into intima) or externally (into adventitia, bleed into mediastinum, thoracic/abdo cavities, pericardial sac)
9
Q
Clinical features of aortic dissection
A
- sudden onset of excruciating pain
- usually from ant chest, radiating to back b/w scapulae, moves downwards as dissection progresses
10
Q
Effects of aortic dissection (3)
A
- Bleeding/rupture into pericardial (cardiac tamponade), pleural or peritoneal cavities - death
- Aortic valve insufficiency (retrograde dissection)
- Extension into aorta branches - vascular obstruction & ischemia eg MI