Aortic Dissection Flashcards
What is acute aortic syndrome?
- Disruption of the layers of arterial wall (tunica adventitia, media and intima)
- Split into 3 subgroups: aortic dissection, penetrating aortic ulcer and intramural haematoma
What is aortic dissection?
- Tear in intimal layer of aortic wall
- Blood flows between tunica intima and media and splits it apart
- Can progress distally or proximally
Anterograde vs retrograde dissections
- Anterograde propagate towards iliac vessels
- Retrograde propagate towards aortic valve (to root of aorta)
Acute vs chronic dissections
- Acute when diagnosed within 14 days or less
- Chronic when diagnosed over 14 days
RF of dissection
- Men
- HTN, Atherosclerosis
- Connective tissue disorders - Marfans, Ehlers Danlos
- Bicuspid aortic valve
What can retrograde dissections result in?
- Prolapse of aortic valve
- Bleeding into pericardium
- Cardiac tamponade
What is a penetrating aortic ulcer?
- Ulcer that penetrates the intima, progressess into media of artery
- Can progress to intramural haematoma, dissection, perforation or aneurysm formation
What is an intramural haematoma?
- Contained aortic wall haematoma
- Bleeding in the media
- Can progress to dissection, performation or aneurysm formation
Classifications of aortic dissections
- Stanford classification - type A and B
- DeBakey classification - anatomically
Stanford classfication
- Type A - ascending aorta, propagate to arch and descending aorta (DeBakey type I and II), tear can originate anywhere along path
- Type B - does not involve ascending aorta, occuring in any other part of aortic arch and descending aorta (DeBakey type III)
DeBakey classification
- Type I - originates in ascending aorta, propagates to at least aortic arch
- Type II - confined to ascending aorta
- Type III - originates distal to subclavian artery in descending aorta (IIIa extends distal to diaphragm, IIIb extends beyound diaphragm into abdominal)
Summary card classification dissection
Presentation of aortic dissection - symptoms
- Tearing chest pain
- Radiating through to back
- BUT often challenging and can be more subtle
Clinical signs aortic dissection
- Tachycardia
- Hypotension - secondary to hypovolaemia OR cardiogenic from severe aortic regurge or tamponade
- New aortic regurge murmur - early diastolic
- Signs end organ hypoperfusion - reduced urine output, lower limb ischaemia, lower conc level
Investigations for aortic dissection presentation - bloods and bedside
- Baseline bloods
- 4 units of packed red blood cells crossmatched
- ECG - exclude cardiac problem
Imaging for aortic dissection
- CT angiogram - allow classification and surgical planning
- Transoesophageal echo - can help if concern re valvular involvement if proximal/retrograde
Initial managment aortic dissection - all
- High flow O2
- IV access
- Fluid resucitation - cautious, target pressure for cerebral perfusion if ruptured, if uncomplicated keep systolic pressure below 110mmHg
Type A vs type B aortic dissection management
- Type A - surgically, worse prognosis
- Uncomplicated Type B - medically
- Penetrating ulcer/intramural haematoma - medically
Following initial management for dissection treated medically/surgically
- Lifelong antihypertensives
- Surveillance imaging - 1,3 and 12 months post discharge, then scans every 6-12 dependent on size of aorta
Surgery for type A dissection
- High mortality rate
- Transfer to cardiothoracic centre
- Removal of ascending aorta (+/- arch) with synthetic graft replacement
- If aortic valve damaged, will need repair too
- Any branches involved of aortic arch will need re-implantation into graft
- If very long Type A may need staged procedures
Type B management dissection
- Uncomplicated = medically
- Manage HTN with IV beta blockers (labetalol) or CCB 2nd line
- Rapidly lower systolic pressure, pulse pressure and pulse rate to minimise stress of dissection and limit propagation
When is surgical management used for type B dissection?
- Not recommended due to risk of retrograde dissection
- Can be considered in complications such as rupture, renal, visceral or limb ischaemia, uncontrollable pain or uncontrolled HTN
What can Type B dissections go on to form?
- Chronic - continued leakage into dissection
- Even if stent has been placed
- Can then form aneurysm
- Then will need endovascular repaur for better survival chance
Complications of aortic dissection
- Aortic rupture
- Aortic regurgitation
- Myocardial ischaemia - secondary to coronary artery dissection
- Cardiac tamponade
- Stroke/paraplegia - carotid artery extension