Vascular Flashcards
1
Q
Define aortic aneurysm
A
- Localized dilatation of an artery > 1.5x normal diameter (3cm and larger for abdo aorta)
- True aneurysm = involves all vessel wall layers (intimate, media, adventitia)
- False aneurysm (pseudo aneurysm) = does not involve all layers; breach in intima/media that allows blood to collect between media and adventitia
2
Q
How are aortic aneurysms classified?
A
- Shape
- Fusiform = concentric, involves full circumference of vessel wall
- Saccular = eccentric, involves only a portion of vessel wall (higher risk of rupture due to unequal distribution of pressure) - Location
- TAA: ascending, transverse arch, descending
- Thoracoabdominal
- AAA: 90-98% are infrarenal (suprarenal = starts above renal arteries + doesn’t involve thoracic aorta; pararenal = starts at the renal arteries but superior mesenteric artery origin is not aneurysmal; juxtarenal = starts immediately distal to renal arteries; infrarenal = starts distal to renal arteries)
3
Q
Risk factors for AAA
A
- Smoking, advanced age, male sex, white race, family history, presence of other large vessel aneurysms, HTN
- Degenerative
- Traumatic
- Mycotic (salmonella, staph, usually suprarenal aneurysms)
- Connective tissue disorder (Marfan syndrome, Loeys-Dietz syndrome, Ehlers-Danlos type 4 syndrome)
- Vasculitis
- Infectious (syphilis, fungal)
- Ascending thoracic aneurysms are associated with bicuspid aortic valve
- Aortic dissection
- Congenital (Turner’s syndrome)
4
Q
Classic symptom triad of ruptured AAA
A
- Hypotension/collapse
- Back/abdo pain
- Palpable, pulsatile abdo mass (caution in patients with raised BMI)
5
Q
Initial management for ruptured AAA
A
- IV access with 2 peripheral large bore IVs
2. Permissive hypotension (systolic BP enough to maintain mental status)
6
Q
Clinical features of AAA
A
- 75% asymptomatic
- commonly abdo aorta
- common presentation due to acute expansion/rupture
- Syncope
- Pain (chest, abdo, flank, back)
- Hypotension
- Palpable pulsatile mass above the umbilicus
- Airway or esophageal obstruction, hoarseness (L recurrent laryngeal nerve paralysis), hemoptysis or hematemesis (indicates thoracic AA)
- Distal pulses may be intact
7
Q
Investigations for AAA
A
- Bloods: FBC, U&Es, urea, creatinine, PTT, INR, blood type, crossmatch
- Abdo USS: for screening + surveillance
- CT with contrast: size determination + EVAR planning
- Peripheral arterial duplex (rule out aneurysm elsewhere)
8
Q
Treatment for AAA
A
- Conservative (for asymptomatic aneurysms that don’t meet size threshold for repair) - cardiovascular risk factor reduction
- Surgical
- indications = ruptured, symptomatic, AAA size > 5.5cm in men or 5cm in women
- open surgery with graft replacement or EVAR (endovascular aneurysm repair)
9
Q
Screening for AAA
A
One time USS for:
- men 65-80y
- women age 65-80y with smoking history or cardiovascular disease
- First degree relatives after age 55
Repeat USS 10yr after initial screening if aortic diameter > 2.5cm and < 3cm