Vascular Flashcards

1
Q

What is the first branch of the external carotid? why is this important?

A

Superior thyroid artery

Imp because: if you see a branch, it’s external: internal doesn’t have branches for a while

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2
Q

Which other structures run with the carotid?

A

Jugular

Vagus nerve

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3
Q

What is an aneurysm?

A

local dilatation of artery. Diameter at least 1.5x normal

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4
Q

What is a true aneurysm?

A

Involves all vessel wall layers (intima, media, adventitia)

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5
Q

What is a false aneurysm?

A

disruption of aortic wall (or anastomotic site

between vessel and graft). Fibrous capsule made of surrounding tissue contains blood from vessel.

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6
Q

How can aneurysms become problematic?

A
  • rupture
  • thrombose
  • embolize
  • erode
  • fistulize
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7
Q

Where can aortic aneurysms be?

A

Throracic
Thoracoabdominal
suprarenal
pararenal (renal arteries arise from aneurysmal aorta, but not SMA)
juxtarenal (begins just below renal arteries)
infrarenal (there is non-aneurysmal aorta distal to origins of renal arteries)

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8
Q

What are the risk factors for aortic aneurysm?

A
smoking (current or prior)
Advanced age ( esp >70)
male
Caucasian
FMHx
other large vessel aneurysms
HTN
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9
Q

What is the most common location of AAA?

A

infrarenal (90-98%)

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10
Q

What is the cause of acute presentation of aortic aneurysm?

A

Acute expansion or rupture

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11
Q

What are the kinds of true aneurysm?

A

Saccular (eccentric, only a portion of wall)

Fusiform (concentric, full circumference of wall)

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12
Q

What kind of aneurysm is higher risk for rupture?

A

Saccular: bc it only involves a portion of the wall, pressure distribution is uneven, making it more vulnerable to rupture

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13
Q

What is the clinical presentation of aortic aneurysm?

A
  • syncope
  • pain (chest, abdo, back, flank)
  • hypotension
  • palpable pulsatile mass above umbilicus
  • airway or esophageal: Hoarseness (recurrent laryngeal paralysis), Hemoptysis, Hematemesis
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14
Q

What proportion of aortic aneurysms are asymptomatic?

A

75% are asymptomatic

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15
Q

What is the classic triad of ruptured AAA?

A

Hypotension/Collapse
Back/Abdominal pain
Palpable, pulsatile abdominal mass

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16
Q

What are the screening guidelines for AAA?

A
  • one-time u/s in M&F >65 with Hx of tobacco use

- U/s screening in 1st degree relatives of pt who present with AAA

17
Q

What are the initial investigations in suspected aortic aneurysm?

A

abdominal u/s!
CBC, lytes, urea, Cr, PTT, INR, type and crossmatch
CT with contrast
peripheral arterial doppler/duplex (to r/o aneurysm elsewhere)

18
Q

How is aortic aneurysm treated non-surgically?

A

if asymptomatic & smallish (don’t require surgery):

  • risk factor reduction. Smoking, HTN, DM, hyperlipidemia
  • exercise, watchful waiting
  • surveillance with ultrasound