Aortic Dissection Flashcards

1
Q

What is aortic dissection? [3]

A

A tear in tunica intima of aortic wall, blood then enters the tear and forces itself between the layers forming a false 2nd lumen [1] that propagates up or down the aorta.p; chronic forms [1]

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2
Q

What causes aortic dissection? [6]

A
  • Direct blunt trauma to chest
  • Cardiac Surgery
  • Marfan’s Syndrome, EDS
  • Congenital Bicuspid AV
  • Atherosclerosis
  • Familial thoracic aortic aneurysm T1&2
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3
Q

What are the risk factors for aortic dissection? [6]

Epidemiology [2]

A
  • Smoking
  • Hypercholesterolaemia
  • Hypertension
  • Pregnancy
  • Cocaine use
  • Arteritis

Ep: M>F, <50y/o

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4
Q

Describe the pain in aortic dissection [5]
Other key symptoms aortic dissection [2]
Symptoms depending on occlusion of smaller arteries by occlusion process [4]

A
  1. Pain
    - Sudden severe back or chest pain
    - Tearing, ripping, sharp character
    - Radiation as dissection progresses
    - Proximal dissection: pain usually restrosternal
    - Distal: pain between scapula and back
  2. Cardiac tamponade
  3. Pleural effusion (haemothorax): pleuritic pain, SOB
  4. Symptoms depending on occlusion of smaller arteries by occlusion process:
    o Coronary arteries: angina or MI
    o Spinal arteries: paraplegia
    o Distal aorta: limb ischaemia, mesenteric ischaemia, renal ischaemia (monitor urine output), retroperitoneal haemorrhage (back pain and bruising)
    o Carotid artery: neuro deficit
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5
Q

What are the clinical signs of aortic dissection? [5]

What finding would you see on ECG? [1]

A
  • Reduced or absent peripheral pulses
  • BP mismatch between limbs
  • AR murmur (sort early diastolic)
  • Hyper/Hypotension
  • Pulmonary Oedema
  • On ECG, Inferior ST elevation
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6
Q

How do we investigate a case of Aortic Dissection? [3]

A

CXR: Can show mediastinal widening - pleural effusion - Loss of aortic knob - tracheal deviation. A -ve CXR doesnt rule out AD

CTA/MRA: MRA is the best and can confirm the diagnosis

TOE: The most common way to confirm the diagnosis

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7
Q

Describe the 2 classifications of aortic dissection [5]

A

Stanford:
A = Asc. Aorta involved - treat Surgically
B = Asc. aorta excluded - Treat medically

Debakey:
1 = Propagates from Asc. Aorta
2 = Stays in Asc. Aorta
3 = Starts in Desc. Aorta and can move

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8
Q

How do we medically treat Aortic Dissection? [3]

Which type warrants medical treatment?

A
Medical treatment is indicated for Stanford B classification
With Strict BP control:
- CCBs 
- Beta Blockers 
- Sodium Nitroprusside (vasodilator)
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9
Q

How do we surgically treat Aortic Dissection?

Which type warrants medical treatment?

A

Surgically replacing the valve and/or a section of the aorta.
Surgical treatment is indicated for Stanford A classification

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10
Q

What are the possible complications of aortic dissection? [2]

A

Rupturing into lumen, pericardium (tamponade) or Mediastinum (haemothorax)

Occlusion of important branches

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11
Q

How will a dissected aorta appear histologically? [3]

A

There will be a loss of elastin & muscle fibres [1] with an accumulation of mucopolysaccharides in cyst-like spaces. [1]

This is called ‘Cystic Medial Necrosis’ [1]

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