Hypertension and Diseases of Peripheral Vasculature Flashcards
What are the three layers of aorta?
- luminal surface - intima (endothelial cells)
- middle - media (smooth muscle cells, collagen, elastic fibers)
- collagen - tensile strength to deal with high pressure
- elastin - stretching up to 250%, ability to recoil under pressure
- outer - adventitia (collagen, perivascular nerves, vasa vasorum = network that supplies O2 blood to aorta itself
What happens to aortic layers as you age?
Why does systolic pressure tend to rise with age?
Media layer of the aorta in young age has 1collagen (tensile) :2 elastin (stretch and recoil). With age, elastin wears off and collagen become predominant - arteries stiffen.
With less elastin, aorta is not stretching as much during systole and most energy from myocardial contraction is spent pushing blood through stiffer aortic walls.
What is an aneurysm?
An aneurysm is an abnormal localized dilatation of an artery.
What is an aortic aneurysm? How is it different from diffuse ectasia?
aortic aneurism - dilatation of a portion of the aorta by at least 50%. true aneurysm - dilatation of all three layers of the aorta - large bulge.
diffuse ectasia - generalized (vs localized) dilatation of the aortic diameter, tends to be lesser than aneurism.
What are the two types of true aortic aneurisms?
a fusiform aneurysm - symmetrical dilation of the entire circumference of a segment of the aorta, more common
a saccular aneurysm is a localized outpouching involving only a portion of a circumference
memory aid : think “fuse” for double sided and “sac (bag)” for one sided
What is the difference between true and false aneurysm?
true aneurysm - dilation of all three layers of the aorta (intima, media and adventitia), caused by degenerative changes in the aortic wall.
false aneurysm or pseudoaneurysm - contained hole (rupture) of the vessel wall that develops when blood leaks out of intimal and medial layers, but is contained by adventitia or perivascular clot (not all of 3 layers are affected). false anneurysms are unstable and can rupture completely.
What is cystic medial degeneration or cystic medial necrosis?
cystic medial degeneration = cystic medial necrosis
degeneration changes in media with destruction of elastic and muscular tissues. associated with aging, genetic conditions (like Marfan syndrome) and hypertension. cystic b/c sometimes can form cyst-like shapes. characteristic of an aneurysms.
What conditionals are associated with true aortic aneurysms?
- cystic medial necrosis (usually for ascending aortic aneurysms)
- atherosclerosis (usually for descending and abdo aneurysms)
- infection of the arterial wall
- vasculitis
What is atherosclerosis?
condition in which an artery wall thickens as a result of the accumulation of calcium and fatty materials such as cholesterol and triglyceride -> reduced elasticity, less blood flow, higher bp.
How is atherosclerosis different from arterosclerosis and arteriolosclerosis?
arteriosclerosis is a general term describing any hardening (and loss of elasticity) of medium or large arteries (from Greek ἀρτηρία (artēria), meaning “artery”, and σκλήρωσις (sklerosis), meaning “hardening”); arteriolosclerosis is any hardening (and loss of elasticity) of arterioles (small arteries); atherosclerosis is a hardening of an artery specifically due to an atheromatous plaque.
What are risk factors for atherosclerosis?
- smoking
- hypertension
- dyslipidemia (abnormal amount of lipids = cholesterol and fats in the blood)
- male gender
- advanced age
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Clinical presentation of aortic aneurysms?
Most aneurysms are asymptomatic
Symptoms may be related to compression of nearby-structures. Thoracic aortic aneurysms may compress the trachea or bronchus = cough, dyspnea (shortness of breath), pneumonia
compression of the esophagus can lead to dysphagia (difficulty swallowing), involvement of recurrent laryngeal nerve - voice hoarseness.
abdominal aortic aneurysms can cause abdo or back pain or non-specific GI symptoms.
most worried about rupture (risk related to size), which can be fatal.
Optional: aortic aneurysm
risk of rupture vs surgical risk
thoracic aneurysms rupture (annual rates)
2% for
3% for 5-5.9 cm
7% for > 6 cm
mortality due to surgical repair = 3-5%
abdo aneurysm rupture (annual risk)
- 3% for < 4 cm
- 5% for 4-4.9 cm
- 5% for 5-5.9 cm
mortality due to surgical removal of abdo eneurysms = 1-2%
What is the management of aortic aneurysms?
Repeated imaging every 6-12 months
surgical treatment for ascending aneurysms >5.5-6 cm, less if Marfan
surgical treatment for descending aneurysms >6.5-7 cm,
abdo > 5.5 or those that enlarge at >1.0 cm/year
FYI:
thoracic aneurysms rupture (annual rates)
2% for
3% for 5-5.9 cm
7% for > 6 cm
mortality due to surgical repair = 3-5%
abdo aneurysm rupture (annual risk)
- 3% for < 4 cm
- 5% for 4-4.9 cm
- 5% for 5-5.9 cm
mortality due to surgical removal of abdo eneurysms = 1-2%
How are aortic aneurysms surgically repaired?
thoracic: bypass -> aneurysm resected -> replaced with a prosthetic Dacron graft
multiple segments done in stages if necessary
in some cases, endovascular stent is possible across aneurysm via transluminal placement
abdo: prosthetic graft
What are some steps towards management of aortic aneurysms?
medical management: lifestyle (smoking reduction, diet, exercise)
beta-blockers for Marfan syndrome
surgery considered
What is aortic dissection?
blood from the aortic lumen goes through a tear in the intima and spreads in medial layer. can be due to advanced age, hypertension, other causes (cystic medial necrosis,…)
What are the two types of aortic dissection?
Stanford type A - ascending aorta is involved, regardless of site of primary tear
Stanford type B - does not involve ascending aorta or arch, only descending thoracic and abdo aorta
ascending thoracic aorta (65%)
descending thoracic aorta (20%)
aortic arch (10%)
abdo (5%)
What is the treatment for Stanford Type A aortic dissection and Stanford Type B aortic dissection?
reduce systolic blood pressure -> 100-120 mm Hg
decrease force of ventricular contraction to minimize aortic wall stress -> beta blockers (to reduce force of contraction and heart rate), vasodilators (sodium nitroprusside, etc)
Type A dissection - more serious because of risk of spread to coronary and arch vessels (2/3 or all dissections). In this type, early surgical intervention is shown to improve outcomes (repairing tear, suturing the edges +/- insrting a synthetic aortic graft)
Type B dissection - if uncomplicated, can be managed with meds alone. Surgery is indicated in rare cases (if spreading, compromises major branches of aorta, etc)
What do grafts do in aortic dissection?
they “seal” the entry site of dissection, so that false lumen can thrombose and close
What is the clinical presentation of aortic dissections?
sudden, severe pain with “rearing” or “ripping” quality in the anterior chest (typical type A dissection) or between the scapulae (type B dissections). the pain travels as dissection spreads and can radiate anywhere in thorax and abdomen. painless dissections rare (6.4%)
some physical findings:
hypertension (either as cause or secondary to severe pain (sympa response) or decreased renal vascular flow (renin-angiotensin activated)
if dissection occludes one of the subclavian arteries, there may be a difference in systolic bp between arms
neurologic deficits may accompany dissection into the carotid vessels.
IMAGE right away!
What is peripheral artery disease (PAD)?
Peripheral artery disease (PAD) is an occlusion or stenosis (narrowing) of an artery that provides blood to the limbs.
List causes of peripheral artery disease (PAD)?
atherosclerosis
thromboembolism
vasculitis
What is the most common cause of PAD?
atherosclerosis
What are major risk factors for atherosclerotic PAD?
smoking
diabetes mellitus
dyslipidemia
hypertension
about 40% of PAD patients also have CAD
=> 2x increase in cardiovascular death if diagnosed with PAD
What is the relationship between blood flow, vessel radius and length?
Poiseuille’s equation:
delta P = pressure drop across stenosis
r = vessel radius
n = blood viscosity
L= length of stenosis
the degree of vessel narrowing by the stenosis (change in r) has the gratest impact on flow
also for stenoses of same radius and legth, the greater the pressure drop, the greater the flow