Thoracic aortic aneurysm Flashcards
1
Q
What is an aneurysm?
A
- Perisistent abdominal dilatation of artery to 1.5 its normal diameter
2
Q
What does a thoracic aortic aneurysm involve?
A
Can involve:
* Ascending aorta or
* Aortic root or
* Aortic arch or
* Descending aorta or
* Thoracoabdominal aorta segments
3
Q
Thoracic aortic aneurysm vs AAA
A
- Less common but high mortality
4
Q
Cause of thoracic aortic aneurysm - what happens
A
- Degradation of tunica media
- Artery loses structural integrity and dilates
- Diameter increases = wall tension rises and further increases diameter –> cycle
5
Q
Main causes of thoracic aneurysm - underlying
A
- Connective tissue diseases
- Bicuspid aortic valve
- Other - trauma, aortic dissection, aortic arteritis, tertiary syphilis
6
Q
Growth of thoracic aortic aneurysm
A
- Usually grow mean rate 1-2mm per year
- Rate higher in Marfans and descending aneurysms (compared to ascending) and dissected (compared to non)
7
Q
RF for thoracic aortic aneurysm
A
- FH
- HTN
- Atherosclerosis
- Smoking
- High BMI
- Male
- Advanced age
8
Q
Presentation of TAA
A
- Often asymptomatic - found incidentally
- If symptomatic –> chest pain
- Location of aneurysm determines location of pain
- Ascending –> anterior chest pain
- Aortic arch –> neck pain
- Descending –> posterior thoracic
9
Q
Other symptoms of TAA
A
- Back pain - spinal compression
- Hoarse voice - damage to left recurrent laryngeal nerve in arch aneurysm
- Heart failure - if invovlement of aortic valve
- Can get distended neck veins if SVC compression
10
Q
TAA risk
A
- Risk of rupture or dissection –> lethal
- = sudden onset chest/back pain and hypovolaemic shock
11
Q
Bedside and bloods for TAA
A
- Routine bloods - FBC, U&E, clotting
- ECG
12
Q
Imaging for TAA
A
- CXR - see widened mediastinum, enlarged aortic knob and possible tracheal deviation BUT NOT sensitive enoigh to definitive diagnose
- Need CT angiogram
- TOE can also be used to detect aortic dissection etc
13
Q
Management TAA - medical
A
- Medical management - statin and antiplatelet therapy (eg Clopidogrel)
- Decrease risk of MI
- Control BP and smoking cessation
14
Q
When to surgically manage TAA?
A
- Dependent on location and patient factors
- eg Marfans or previous thoracic dissection have greater risk of dissection/rupture = lower threshold to intervene
15
Q
Location of TAA and when to surgically intervene
A
- Ascending aorta - when diameter >5.5cm, excised and replaced with graft. Bentall procedure if aortic root involved (replaces valve too)
- Aortic arch - >5.5cm, multilimbed graft (for branching vessels)
- Descending aorta - >6cm - open or endovascular