aneurysms Flashcards
what is an aneurysm?
EXCESSIVE, LOCALIZED enlargement of an artery
-caused by: weakening of artery wall
is an aneurysm vasodilation?
aneurysm is NOT vasodilation! vasodilation occurs throughout entire vessel and is fully reversible
-aneurysm is a bulge in a vessel in ONE area and is PERMENANT
aneurysms are a result of?
degenerative change in vessel wall
—> d/t increased age, decreased ability for tissue repair
risk factors for an aneurysm?
- atherosclerosis
- untreated HTN
- congential defects (in CVS, weakened walls)
- aging
types of aneurysms?
- TRUE aneurysm= vessel wall intact, >50% increase in diameter
- FALSE aneurysm= vessel wall compromised, not intact
forms of aneurysms?
fusiform
saccular
dissecting
fusiform aneurysm?
bulge on both sides of vessel (bilateral)
saccular aneurysm?
bulge on one side forming what looks like a sac
dissecting aneurysm?
dissects layer of walls (blood goes in between vessel wall layers)
common sites of aneurysms? (3)
- where vessels bifurcate (divide into two branches)
- where vessels bend
- where vessel is not supported externally by muscles or other structures (abdominal and thoracic aorta, femoral and iliac and popliteal arteries)
complications of aneurysms?
WEAKENED vessels BURST -in brain= stroke -in aorta= severe blood loss, death THROMBOSIS= more time to deal wit then rupture- blood goes through bulging area from small area to large diameter (blood swirling--> stasis---> pooling---> thrombus) DISTAL EMBOLIZATION (thrombus breaks off and moves distal) ANEURYSM APPLIES PRESSURE to adjacent tissue (if this is a nerve or another BV there can be problems like l/o function
treatment for aneurysms?
surgery performed to prevent complications (rupture can also be repaired)