Vascular Flashcards

1
Q

What is Subclavian steal syndrome? What are the symptoms? How is it diagnosed? How is it managed?

A
  • Rare atherosclerotic stenotic plaque at the origin of the subclavian
  • Allows enough blood supply to the arm for normal activity, but not for exercise
  • The arm sucks blood from the brain via vertebral artery when exercised.
  • Sx include claudication of the arm and posterior neurologic signs (visual and equilibrium problems)
  • DO NOT confuse with thoracic outlet syndrome (same vascular sx but no neurologic sx)
  • Dx by duplex scanning (reversal of flow)
  • Cured with bypass surgery
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2
Q

Which is the most common sx of AAA?

A

Typically asymptomatic

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3
Q

How are AAA usually found?

A
  • On exam as a pulsatile mass between the xiphoid process and the umbilicus
  • Incidentally on XR, CT, Sonograms scans done for another purpose
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4
Q

How are AAA managed?

A
  • If 5-6 cm: elective repair

- If it grows 1 cm/year or faster: elective repair

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5
Q

What technique can be used to treat AAA? What caveats are found?

A
  • Endovascular stent inserted percutaneously
  • good 10 year outcome
  • AAA should be unruptured and should have a 2.5 cm neck
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6
Q

When is immediate/emergency repair of AAA indicated?

A
  • When AAA is tender: may rupture within 1-2 days
  • Excruciating back pain in patient with large AAA: Leakage, retroperitoneal hematoma, blowout into the peritoneal cavity only minutes away
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7
Q

When is surgery indicated in atherosclerotic disease of lower extremities?

A

-Only to relieve disabling symptoms or to save extremity from impending necrosis

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8
Q

How does atherosclerotic disease of lower extremities present clinically?

A

-Pain brought about by walking and relived by rest (intermittent Claudication)

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9
Q

What is the treatment for intermittent claudication?

A
  • No workup is indicated if it does not interfere significantly with the patients lifestyle
  • Smoking cessation, exercise program, cilostazol can help
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10
Q

What is the treatment for disabling intermittent claudication?

A
  • Disabling claudication required doppler studies to look for pressure gradient.
  • If no gradient is found, then the disease is in the small vessels surgery cannot be performed.
  • IF there’s a significant gradient then CT angio and MRI angio are done to identify stenosis/obstruction
  • Angioplasty and stenting is done is short stenotic segments are found
  • Bypass grafts, sequential stents of longer stents may be needed for long stenotic segments
  • Aortobifemoral graft are sone with prosthetic materal
  • In distal vessels a reverse saphenous vein graft is used
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11
Q

What are the stages of atherosclerotic disease of lower extremities?

A
  1. Asymptomatic
  2. Intermittent claudication
  3. Disabling intermittent claudication
  4. Rest pain
  5. Ulceration
  6. Gangrene
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12
Q

How does Rest pain present?

A

-Patient complains that “s/he cannot sleep” (caused by calf pain)

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13
Q

What do patients with rest pain notice?

A

Sitting up and dangling the legs helps resolve the pain. Soon after the legs become purple

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14
Q

What does PE shoe with rest pain?

A

Shiny atrophic skin without hair, no peripheral pulses. Work up and therapy is the same as that of disabling claudication

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15
Q

In which patients is arterial embolization of distal source seen?

A

In those with Afib or with recent MI which release thrombus from the atrial appendage and the ventricle wall, respectively

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16
Q

What are the symptoms seen in patients with arterial embolization of distal source ?
How is it managed?

A

Sudden onset of the 6P’s:

  • Painful, pale, poikilothermic (cold), pulseless, paresthetic and paralytic lower extremity
  • Evaluation and treatment should start within 6 hour from sx onset.
  • Doppler can locate site of thrombosis
  • clot busters can tx early incomplete occlusion
  • Fogerty catheter is used to tx complete obstructions
  • Fasciotomy should be done if several hour have passed before revascularization (Prevents compartment syndrome)
17
Q

How does a dissecting aneurysm of the thoracic aorta present?

A

Similar to an MI: sudden onset of severe and tearing chest pain, radiating to the back and migrating down.
-unequal pulses in upper extremities and wide mediastinum
-

18
Q

In what patients are aortic dissections common?

A

Poorly controlled hypertensives

19
Q

How should aortic dissection be managed?

A
  • EKG and trops to r/o MI

- Spiral CT scan is best choice for dx (MRA and TEE may be used)

20
Q

How are dissection of ascending aorta treated?

A

Surgery

21
Q

How are dissection of descending aorta treated?

A

Medically by controlling hypertension in the ICU

22
Q

When a vascular bypass graft fails within 30 days what is the most likely the cause?

A

Technical failure

23
Q

When a vascular bypass graft fails within 2 yrs what is the most likely reason?

A

Intimal hyperplasia

24
Q

When a vascular bypass graft fails after 2 yrs what is the most likely reason?

A

Recurrent atherosclerotic disease