Aortic Dissection Flashcards
What is aortic dissection?
A tear in the wall of the aorta, the walls are then forced apart by blood.
Comes in Acute & chronic forms
What causes aortic dissection?
- Trauma
- Cardiac Surgery
- Marfan’s Syndrome
- Congenital Bicuspid AV
- Atherosclerosis
- Hypertension
What are the risk factors for aortic dissection?
Trauma - Smoking - Hypercholesterolaemia - Hypertension - Pregnancy - Cocaine use - Arteritis
What are the symptoms of Aortic Dissection?
- Severe tearing chest pain radiating to the back (location varies based on location/spread of tear)
- Collapse due to tamponade/Acute AR/External rupture
- Pleuritic Chest Pain due to cardiac tamponade and/or haemothorax from an external rupture
What are the clinical signs of aortic dissection?
- reduced or absent peripheral pulses
- BP mismatch between limbs
- AR murmur (sort early diastolic)
- Hyper/Hypotension
- Pulmonary Oedema
- Inferior ST elevation
How do we investigate a case of Aortic Dissection?
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
How do we classify Aortic dissection?
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
How do we medically treat Aortic Dissection?
With Strict BP control:
CCBs - Beta Blockers - Sodium Nitroprusside (vasodilator)
How do we surgically treat Aortic Dissection?
Surgically replacing the valve and/or a section of the aorta.