Vascular Flashcards

Vascular dx

1
Q

What is the definition of an abdominal aortic aneurysm?

A

A localised enlargement of the abdominal aorta where the diameter is >3 cm or >50% larger than normal diameter.

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2
Q

What are the 3 types of aneurysms?

A

True (tear in all 3 layers of artery wall):

  1. Saccular
  2. Fusiform
  3. False aneurysms- tear in the tunica intimacy creating a false lumen
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3
Q

What are the risk factors for AAA?

A
Smoking
Male
Connective tissue disorders- Marfan's, Ehlers-Danlos syndrome
Old age
HTN
Inflammatory disorders
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4
Q

What are the presenting symptoms of un-ruptured AAAs?

A

Majority are asymptomatic- incidental finding

May complain of pain/pulsation in the back/abdo/groin

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5
Q

What are the risk factors for AAAs?

A
Male
CTD
Hypertension
Hypercholesterolaemia
Smoking
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6
Q

What is the mortality rate of ruptured AAAs?

A

90%

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7
Q

What is the presentation of a ruptured AAA?

A

Sudden, severe abdominal pain, radiating to the back
Syncope
Shock signs

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8
Q

What are the signs of an AAA? (ruptured or not)

A
  • Pulsatile & laterally expansile mass on palpation
  • Abdominal bruit

IF RUPTURED:

  • Grey Turner’s/Cullen’s- retroperitoneal bleeding
  • Low BP/high HR - hypovolaemic shock
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9
Q

What is the screening criteria for AAAs?

A

Males >65yrs

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10
Q

What are the investigations for suspected AAA?

A

BEDSIDE

  • Abdominal Ultrasound- GOLD STANDARD
  • Can detect presence of AAA but not whether it has ruptured or not

BLOODS

  • FBC, clotting screen, U&Es, LFTs
  • Cross match in case surgery is needed

IMAGING (detect rupture)

  • CT Angiogram
  • Magnetic resonance angiogram – contrast allergy/renal impairment
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11
Q

What is the management plan for small AAAs (3.5-4.4cm) and medium AAAs (4.5-5.4cm)?

A

Follow up scan in 1 year (small) or 3 months (medium)

CONSERVATIVE: smoking, exercise, weight loss

MEDICAL:

  • statins
  • aspirin
  • BP management
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12
Q

What is the management plan for large AAAs (5.5cm+)?

A

Open aortic surgery

Endovascular repair

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13
Q

What are the cons of open aortic surgery?

A

Longer recovery time hence done on young patients

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14
Q

What are the cons of endovascular repair?

A

Less peri-op mortality but greater risk of needing more procedures

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15
Q

What is the definition of an aortic dissection?

A

A tear in the tunica intima causing blood accumulation between the inner and outer tunica media (false lumen)

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16
Q

What are the 2 classification systems for aortic dissections?

A

DEBAKEV
Type I –> Type IIIb

STANFORD
Type A- ascending aorta tear
Type B- descending aorta tear (after the left subclavian)

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17
Q

What are the risk factors of an aortic dissection?

A
HTN
Atherosclerosis
Iatrogenic (angiography/plasty)
Congenital- coarctation of aorta
Crack cocaine
Smoking
Male
Connective tissue disorders
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18
Q

What are the presenting symptoms of aortic dissections?

A

Sudden central tearing pain, radiating to the back

Symptoms caused by blockages to branches of the aorta

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19
Q

What can happen if the tear affects the carotids/subclavian?

A

Hemiparesis

Blackouts

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20
Q

What can happen if the tear affects the coronary arteries?

A

Angina

MI

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21
Q

What can happen if the tear affects the renal arteries?

A

AKI

Renal failure

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22
Q

What can happen if the tear affects the coeliac trunk?

A

Abdominal pain

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23
Q

What can you find on examination of a Pt with aortic dissection?

A
  • Tachycardia
  • BP difference of >20mmHg (50%) between upper limbs
  • Murmur below scapulae

SIGNS OF CAUSE

  • Radio-radial delay (if coarctation of aorta)
  • Wide pulse pressure
  • Hypertension
  • Signs of aortic regurgitation (collapsing pulse)
  • Signs of connective tissue disease
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24
Q

What are the two key signs of aortic insufficiency?

A

High volume collapsing pulse

Early diastolic murmur (aortic regurgitation)

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25
What investigations would you do for aortic dissection and why?
BLOODS - FBC, U&E/LFT- check for downstream organ damage. - Xmatch- 10 units of blood for hypotension - Cardiac enzymes- mimics MI ECG CXR GOLD STANDARD- CT angiogram
26
What would you see in a CXR of a Pt with aortic dissection?
Widened mediastinum Loss of contour of aortic knuckle/visible aortic notch Globular heart
27
Why would you do a CT angiography of a Pt with aortic dissection?
Visualise the location of the dissection
28
Which is the best diagnostic intervention for aortic dissection?
CT angiogram- needs to be ordered as soon as aortic dissection is suspected
29
A 69 year old man with a background of hypertension complained of flank pain all day at work. He then has sudden onset abdominal pain that radiates to his back and groin. He arrives in an ambulance unconscious. The doctor notes Grey Turner’s and Cullen’s signs. What is the most likely diagnosis? A. Renal colic B. Myocardial ischaemia C. Ruptured AAA D. Pancreatitis
C. Ruptured AAA
30
A 65 year old gentleman is coming in for screening for a AAA following a letter received in the post. What modality would be used as a screening tool? A. Abdominal ultrasound B. Abdominal CT C. Abdominal X-ray D. Doppler ultrasound
A. Abdominal Ultrasound
31
A 65 year old gentleman with a known AAA (last measured 5.2 cm) comes in complaining of severe abdominal pain. What investigation would you use to assess if it has ruptured? A. Abdominal ultrasound B. Abdominal CT C. Abdominal X-ray D. Doppler ultrasound
B. Abdominal CT
32
A 70 year old gentleman with known hypertension presents to A&E with tearing chest pain, radiating to the back. His CXR shows a widened mediastinum. What is the most likely diagnosis? A. Aortic dissection B. STEMI C. Tietze’s syndrome D. Costochondritis
A. Aortic dissection
33
Which of the following examination findings is not consistent with an aortic dissection? A. BP 100/40 B. Ejection systolic murmur C. Collapsing pulse D. Radio-radio delay
B. Ejection systolic murmur
34
What is intermittent claudication?
Cramping muscular pain in the calf, thigh, or buttocks, PRECIPITATED BY EXERCISE and alleviated by rest
35
What are the risk factors for peripheral vascular disease?
Cardiovascular RFs: - Smoking - Diabetes mellitus - Hypertension - Male - >40yrs - Hyperlipidaemia
36
What are the signs of acute limb ischaemia? (6Ps)
- Pain - Pale - Pulseless - Parasthesia - Perishingly cold - Paralysis Both legs are often affected at the same time, although the pain may be worse in 1 leg.
37
What is Leriche's syndrome?
Narrowing of the abdominal aorta as it bifurcates into the common iliacs
38
What is the triad seen in Leriche's syndrome?
Bilateral claudication Erectile dysfunction Weak femoral pulses
39
What is the triad of critical limb ischaemia?
Rest pain (Alleviated by standing) Arterial ulcers Gangrene
40
What is the prognosis for intermittent claudication?
80% chance of improvement 5% intervention 1% amputation 15% dead in 5 years
41
What is the prognosis for critical limb ischaemia?
90% intervention 25% amputation 50% dead in 5 years
42
What are the different indices (levels) of ABPI?
>0.95- normal 0.5-0.95-claudication 0.3-0.5- rest pain <0.3- critical ischaemia
43
What can cause false negatives in ABPIs?
Calcification of vessels
44
What other investigations can be done for claudication?
Doppler USS | Magnetic resonance angiography
45
What is acute limb ischaemia?
Sudden lack of blood flow to a limb
46
What are the two causes of acute limb ischaemia?
Thrombus- due to peripheral arterial disease | Embolus- from the heart
47
What are the 3 grades of acute limb ischaemia?
VIABLE -no neuro signs + audible Doppler TREATENED -sensory loss + tense calf + no audible Doppler DEAD -complete neurological deficit, fixed mottling
48
A 65 year old lady with known CVD presents to the GP with pain in her legs. She finds the pain comes on when she is walking to the shops, but is relieved by rest. She has a 40 pack year smoking history. What is the most likely diagnosis? A. Acute limb ischaemia B. Deep vein thrombosis C. Varicose veins D. Peripheral arterial disease
D. Peripheral arterial disease
49
A 60 year old male with known atrial fibrillation presents to A&E with a sudden onset of a painful, cold leg. The doctor is unable to feel peripheral pulses, and upon examination notes a loss of sensation and paralysis. A venous Doppler is inaudible. What is the definitive management? A. Embolectomy B. Watch and wait C. Angioplasty D. Amputation
D. Amputation
50
A 69 year old heavy smoker complains of pain in his leg when he walks to the bus stop. On examination of his leg, you see shiny skin, patchy hair, weak pulses and brittle toenails. What would be the first line investigation? A. Angiography B. Doppler ultrasound C. Magnetic resonance angiography D. ABPI
D. ABPI
51
What is a DVT?
Formation of a clot in the deep veins
52
What is Virchow's triad?
Venous stasis Endothelial damage Hypercoagulability
53
What are the inherited risk factors for DVTs?
Antithrombin deficiency Protein C/S deficiency Antiphospholipid syndrome
54
What are the acquired risk factors for DVTs?
``` Age Pregnancy Trauma Surgery Immobility Previous DVT Cancer Oestrogen ```
55
What is the presentation of a DVT?
50% asymptomatic Leg swelling Calf tenderness Erythema
56
What is found on examination of a DVT?
Pitting oedema Calf warmth Calf swelling >3cm difference Prominent superficial veins
57
What is the scoring used for DVTs?
Well's score
58
If the Well's score is >=2 what investigation do you do?
Leg vein USS
59
If the Well's score is >=2 and the USS is -ve what investigation do you do, and what would you do if THAT finding was positive?
D-dimer | If D-dimer is positive, repeat USS in 6-8 days
60
If the Well's score is <2 what investigation do you do, and what would you do if THAT finding was positive?
D-dimer | If D-dimer is positive, perform USS
61
What management would you provide for a Pt with a DVT?
LMWH for 5 days | Warfarin within 24h for at least 3 months
62
When would you consider thrombolytic therapy?
If the symptoms have been less than two weeks, the Pt is well, has a good life expectancy and at a low risk of bleeding
63
What surgical procedure can be offered for a DVT?
Thrombectomy
64
What preventative management can be offered for a DVT?
Stop OCP 4 weeks before surgery Compression stockings LMWH for high risk Pts
65
Why is LMWH given with warfarin?
Warfarin inhibits F2,7,9,10, Protein C and S Hence it has an initial pro-coagulative phase LMWH is given to counteract this
66
A 38 year old lady presents with swelling in her leg, and associated calf tenderness. She has been taking the OCP for several years. What is the best management for this patient? ``` A. Warfarin + LMWH B. Warfarin C. Aspirin D. LMWH + Aspirin E. LMWH ```
A. Warfarin + LMWH
67
A 72 year old gentleman is complaining of pain in his right leg. He is 8 days post operative for a tibia/fibula fracture repair. What is the minimum amount of time the patient must be anticoagulated for? A. 3 months B. 6 months C. 1 year D. Lifelong
A. 3 months
68
A 32 year old woman on the OCP complains of pain in her calf for one day. She does not have any chest pain or shortness of breath. The nurse tells you that the A&E doctors assessed the patient, who scored 2 although she cannot remember the name of the score. What is the most appropriate initial investigation? A. D-Dimer B. MRA C. Leg Vein USS D. ABPI
C. Leg Vein USS
69
What is the cause of an arterial/ischaemic ulcer?
Lack of blood flow causing ischaemia, commonly due to PAD
70
What is the appearance of an arterial/ischaemic ulcer?
``` Distal (dorsum of foot & between toes) Punched out appearance (well defined) Very painful Gangrene/necrosis Minimal exudate Surrounding skin- hairless, cold, shiny Pale base (grey granulation tissue) ```
71
What is the cause of a venous ulcer?
Inadequate valvular function causes leakage of blood and protein into extravascular spaces. Build up of fibrinogen and fibrin causes reduced O2 delivery Leukocyte accumulation releases proteolytic enzymes and ROS
72
What are the characteristics of a venous ulcer?
- Located in the "gaiter" region (more proximal) - Shallow, irregular - Usually painless (may be itchy) - Wet
73
What is the cause of a neuropathic ulcer?
Diabetics with peripheral neuropathy | Loss of pain sensation in blisters/pressure injuries
74
What are the characteristics of a neuropathic ulcer?
``` Ulcers on the plantar aspect Even wound margins Loss of pain sensation Deep ulcer Calloused skin May be infected Palpable pulses and warm foot ```
75
A 75 year old woman with long standing hypertension has had progressive swelling of her legs over the last 3 months. She has consulted her GP because she has developed an ulcer on the anterior aspect of the right shin which weeps serous fluid profusely. What is the cause of the ulcer? A. Arterial B. Venous C. Neuropathic D. Rheumatoid Arthritis
B. Venous
76
A 62 year old diabetic woman shows you an ulcer on the bottom of her foot. It has a little stone lodged in it, which she hasn’t noticed. On neurological examination, she has no peripheral sensation of light touch up to her mid-foot. What is the cause of the ulcer? A. Arterial B. Venous C. Neuropathic D. Trauma
C. Neuropathic
77
A 78 year old obese woman presents with an ulcer on the top of her foot and one between her toes. They haven’t healed in two months. They are quite small, look punched out and yellow. She complains her feet are always cold and has a history of coronary artery disease. A. Arterial B. Venous C. Neuropathic D. Trauma
A. Arterial
78
A 45 year old lady presents with a 4 cm chronic ulcer on the medial aspect of the lower leg. She has a history of pain in the calf on walking. The skin around the ulcer is brown and heavily indurated. A. Arterial B. Venous C. Neuropathic D. Trauma
B. Venous
79
Define varicose veins
Subcutaneous, permanently dilated veins >3 mm (when standing) caused by VALVULAR INSUFFICIENCY
80
What are the risk factors of varicose veins?
Obesity Pregnancy OCP Family history
81
What are the symptoms/presentation of varicose veins?
Visibly dilated veins Leg aching, especially with prolonged standing Swelling, itching Bleeding NOTE: inspect whilst standing
82
What are the examination findings of varicose veins?
- Veins feel tender/hard - Tap test- tap VV distally & feel thrill over sapheno-femoral junction - Bruits on auscultation - Trendelenburg test
83
What is the endothelial management of varicose veins?
- RADIOFREQUENCY ABLATION catheter inserted into vein and heated--> destroys endothelium and ‘closes’ vein (similar outcome to surgery at 3mths) - ENDOVENOUS LAZER ABLATION: similar but uses laser (similar outcomes to surgery at 2yrs) - MICROINJECTION: liquid/foam used
84
Where is the most common site for an AAA?
90% occur below the renal arteries (infrarenal)
85
Mr Z, a 57-year-old lorry driver who takes crack cocaine at the weekends, arrives at A&E with a ‘really painful tearing feeling’ in his back. An early diastolic murmur is heard over the aortic area and a collapsing pulses is noted on examination. Which murmur is most likely being described?
Aortic regurgitation
86
How can peripheral vascular disease be classified?
- Acute limb ischaemia (sudden decrease in limb perfusion) - Intermittent claudication (pain on exertion) - Critical limb ischaemia (pain at rest)
87
Signs of critical limb ischaemia + intermittent claudication
Most patients with PVD are asymptomatic - Hair loss in feet/limbs - parasthesia - brittle, slow growing toenails - ulcers - absent femoral, popliteal or foot pulses - atrophic skin
88
What may help with the pain in critical limb ischaemia?
Hanging legs over bed helps with pain (gravity)
89
Define acute limb ishcaemia
Sudden decrease in arterial blood flow to a limb that threatens its viability. Vascular emergency --> extensive tissue necrosis -->limb amputation/death
90
Differentiate between acute limb ischaemia and critical limb ischaemia
ACUTE- thromboembolic event - <2 week onset - absent pulses - sudden, unilateral calf tenderness at rest - appearance = pale, marble-white - cold, parasthesia, paralysis - an emergency CRITICAL- atherosclerotic event - > 2 week onset - weak/absent pulses - gradual pain, at rest - appearance = pink - warm - not an emergency
91
Describe the clinical test used to detect limb ischaemia
BEURGER'S TEST - Lie patient flat on bed & lift up leg to 45° - Limb developing pallor indicates arterial insufficiency - <20°is Beurger’s angle and indicates severe limb ischaemia - Patient then swings leg over the bed, reactive hyperaemia is seen
92
What is reactive hyperaemia?
Leg goes from pale --> red after elevation then lowering Colour change occurs as a result of arteriolar dilatation, which is a response to increased anaerobic metabolic waste build up in the lower limbs.
93
What investigations do you do for PVD?
Full cardiovascular risk assessment: - BP & HR - Bloods (GBC, fasting glucose, lipids) - ECG Ankle-Brachial Pressure Index (ABPI)= GOLD STANDARD Directly visualise site of stenosis: - COLOUR DUPLEX ULTRASOUND - MAGENTIC RESONANCE ANGIOGRAM
94
How can ankle-brachial pressure index score be used to diagnose PVD?
Normal range: 0.9 --> 1.2 <0.9 abnormal <0.5 CLI
95
A triad of: - Buttock claudication - Impotence - Absent / weak distal pulses is suggestive of which condition?
Leriche Syndrome aka aortoiliac occlusive disease
96
What causes Leriche syndrome?
Narrowing of iliac arteries by atherosclerosis
97
Mr X speaks to his GP after noticing some hair loss on his feet and numbness in his toes. The GP finds Mr X’s ankle-brachial pressure index to be 0.7. What does result suggest?
Abnormal ABPI, but not yet critical limb ischaemia | CLI would be 0.5 or less
98
What are the surrounding signs of an arterial ulcer?
Hair loss, shiny & pale skin Calf muscle wasting Absent pulses Night pain- worse supine & relieved by hanging legs off the bed
99
State 4 signs seen with venous ulcers
- Stasis eczema = retrograde flow of blood - Lipodermatosclerosis = panniculitis - Atrophie blanche - Haemosiderin deposition- congested blood leaks out causing oedema + dark pigmentation
100
What is lipodermatosclerosis?
Type of panniculitis (inflammation of the layer of fat beneath the skin). Causes pain, hardening of skin, redness, swelling & tapering above the ankles (champagne bottle sign) VENOUS ULCERS
101
What is atrophic blanche?
Areas of white, shiny, atrophic skin surrounded by small dilated capillaries and sometimes areas of hyperpigmentation
102
What is the gold standard investigation for both arterial and venous ulcers?
Duplex USS of lower limbs
103
What investigations would you do for ulcers?
Gold standard for both = duplex USS ``` ARTERIAL = same as for PVD VENOUS = monitor surface area of ulcer = swab/biopsy if suspect infection/malignancy ```
104
What is a long term complication of venous ulcers that requires biopsy?
MARJOLIN'S ULCER Squamous cell carcinoma that most commonly arise from areas of chronic inflammation or injury Develop over many years
105
Management of venous ulcers
- Graded compression stockings - Debridement + cleaning - Abx if infected - Moisturising cream good prognosis if adhere to treatment
106
What must you ensure before providing venous ulcer patients with compression stockings?
DM, neuropathy & PVD | - may worsen ischaemia
107
Epidemiology of varicose veins
Age increasing incidence Female (20-25% women suffer, 10-15% men) Caucasian
108
State the primary and secondary causes of varicose veins
PRIMARY- idiopathic valvular incompetence = 98% SECONDARY- 1. Venous outflow obstruction (ascites, pregnancy, ovarian cysts, pelvic malignancy) 2. DVT 3. AV malformations eg fistula
109
Describe the Trendelenburg test
1. Patient lies supine and leg is lifted and the veins are emptied  2. A tourniquet is placed above the knee 3. When standing up, veins should refill in 30-35 seconds as blood returns from capillaries - rapid filling on standing indicates deep veins valvular incompetence - rapid filling on removal of tourniquet indicates superficial valvular incompetence
110
What are the investigations for varicose veins?
clinical diagnosis, gold standard/only test = DOPPLER USS - Localises the site of valve incompetence - Can be used to exclude DVT
111
conservative management of varicose veins
- Compression stockings | - Lifestyle changes- weight loss, exercise, leg elevation
112
Surgery options varicose veins
- Stripping of the long saphenous vein - Saphenofemoral ligation - Avulsion of varicosities
113
Complications of varicose veins
- Venous ulcer - Stasis eczema - Lipodermatosclerosis - Hemosiderin deposition Complications of surgery/sclerotherapy (scarring, perineal nerve damage, phlebitis)