Aortic Aneurysm Flashcards
What is the pathogenesis of aortic aneurysm formation?
Medial degeneration Regulation of elastic/collagen in aortic wall Aneurysmal dilatation Increase in aortic wall stress Progressive dilatation
What is a true aneurysm?
All three vessel layers are intact
What is a false aneurysm?
There is a breach in the vessel wall (surrounding structures act as a vessel wall)
What are the three main risk factors for aortic aneurysm formation?
Male
Smoking
Hypertension
What is the difference between symptomatic and asymptomatic AAA?
Asymptomatic =
Identified on imaging for other pathology
Screening and surveillance
Symptomatic =
Pain
Trashing (clot breaks off and travels down legs, causing damage)
Collapse
What is the presentation of a ruptured AAA?
Sudden onset epigastric/central pain, may radiate to the back
? tachycardia, hyper/hypotensive
Pulsatile, expansile mass +/- tenderness
What are the investigations for an AAA, and what are their pros/cons?
Ultrasound =
Screening/surveillance
Diameter only
CT scan =
Gives morphology
Identifies rupture
When do you intervene with an AAA?
Symptomatic
Asymptomatic
>5.5cm AP diameter
Expansion >0.5cm/6 months
What surgical options are available for AAA?
EVAR - endovascular aneurysm repair
Open repair
What is EVAR and what are the pros/cons?
X-ray guided to exclude AAA from inside the vessel (stenting)
Usually only of elderly who cannot have open repair
Safer in complex aneurysms
Needs more follow up
May need more interventions
What happens in open repair and what are the pros/cons?
Laparotomy
Clamp aorta + iliac
Dacron graft
Tube v Bifurcated graft
Possible in most people
Effective for life
Greater mortality risk
Slower recovery