Aortic dissection Flashcards
What is aortic dissection?
A tear in the intimal layer of the aorta causes bleeding into the intimacy-media space.
How is aortic dissection classified?
Stanford classification:
Type A - involves the ascending aorta
Type B - Involves only the descending aorta (distal to the left subclavian artery).
DeBakey classification:
Type I (Stanford A)- originates in the ascending aorta and propagates to at least the arch
Type II - Involves the ascending aorta only
Type III A - descending aorta only and above the diaphragm
Type III B (Stanford B) - descending aorta only and descends below the diaphragm.
What are the risk factors for aortic dissection?
- hypertension
- smoking
- advanced age
- male
- family history
- pregnancy
- trauma (tear at the aortic isthmus in deceleration injuries)
- connective tissue disorders and congenital aortic disorders.
What are the presenting symptoms/signs of aortic dissection?
Pain - classically tearing chest pain radiating to the back.
Absent pulses distal to the dissection/limb ischaemia
Syncope or collapse
Stroke
Myocardial infarction
What are the complications associated with aortic dissection?
Cardiac - myocardial infarction, aortic regurgitation, tamponade
Neurological - stroke, paraplegia from spinal cord ischaemia
Renal - AKI
Vascular - distal limb ischaemia and compartment syndrome
Gastro - mesenteric ischaemia
Haematological - major transfusion, coagulopathy
What imaging can be used for aortic dissection?
Most commonly - CT aorta
Gold standard - aortography
Other useful modalities:
- echo (TTE/TOE) - dissection flap, pericardial effusion/tamponade, regurgitation
CXR - widened mediastinum, loss of aortic knuckle
MRI - can visualise dissection but not really appropriate in unstable patients and CT can do the same.
What are the principles of management of aortic dissection?
- Resuscitate and stabilise the patient in an A-E manner:
- (paying attention to neurology, limb pulses, cardiac function (ECG, echo, trop), renal function (catheter, U&Es) and invasive blood pressure monitoring and analgesia).
- Establish diagnosis with urgent CT aorta
- differentiate between type A and B.
- Discuss with cardiothoracic/aortic surgical team
- For type B, often 1st line is BP control and heart rate control (beta blockers (1), CCBs (2), SNP, hydralazine, GTN (3)) - aiming for systolic 100- 120mmHg but adequate organ/limb perfusion.
- For complicated type B or type A - surgery.
What is an acute aortic syndrome?
Constellation of life-threatening aortic conditions with a similar presentation. All involve an injury to the wall of the aorta, but have distinct survival characteristics:
European society cardiology classification:
- class 1: Classic dissection
- class 2: Intramural haemorrhage/haematoma
- class 3: Subtle-discrete aortic dissection
- class 4: Plaque rupture/ulceration (penetrating ulcer)
- class 5: traumatic/iatrogenic dissection