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Aortic Dissection

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Title: Aortic Dissection


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Aortic Dissection
  • Matt White
  • February 8, 2010
  • Morning Report

7
Aortic Dissection
  • Background
  • Epidemiology
  • Clinical characteristics
  • Diagnostic Modalities
  • Treatment

8
Aortic Dissection
  • Background
  • Epidemiology
  • Clinical characteristics
  • Diagnostic Modalities
  • Treatment

9
History
  • First known case was King George II on October,
    25, 1760
  • First successful repair by Dr. Michael DeBakey in
    1955.
  • ". . . spontaneous tear of the arterial coats is
    associated with atrocious pain, with symptoms,
    indeed, in the case of the aorta of angina
    pectoris and many instances have been mistaken
    for it"
  • William Osler, 1910.

10
Mechanism
  • Primary event is a tear in the aortic intima.
  • Degeneration of aortic media, or cystic medial
    necrosis, is felt to be a prerequisite
    nontraumatic aortic dissection
  • Blood passes into the aortic media through the
    tear, separating the intima from the media and
    creating a false lumen.
  • Uncertain whether the initiating event is a
    primary rupture of the intima with secondary
    dissection of the media, or hemorrhage within the
    media and subsequent rupture of the overlying
    intima

11
Mechanism (contd)
  • Propagation of the dissection can occur both
    distal and proximal to the initial tear,
  • Complications of dissection
  • ischemia (coronary, cerebral, spinal, or
    visceral)
  • aortic regurgitation
  • Pericardial effusion/cardiac tamponade

12
Nomenclature
  • DeBakey classification system
  • Type I - Originates in ascending aorta,
    propagates at least to the aortic arch and often
    beyond it distally.
  • Type II Originates in and is confined to the
    ascending aorta.
  • Type III Originates in descending aorta, rarely
    extends proximally but will extend distally.
  • Daily (Stanford) classification system
  • Divided into 2 groups A and B depending on
    whether the ascending aorta is involved.
  • A Type I and II DeBakey
  • B Type III DeBakey

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Percentage 60 10-15 25-30
Type DeBakey I DeBakey II DeBakey III
Stanford A Stanford A Stanford B
Proximal Proximal Distal
Classification of aortic dissection Classification of aortic dissection Classification of aortic dissection Classification of aortic dissection
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Aortic Dissection
  • Background
  • Epidemiology
  • Clinical characteristics
  • Diagnostic Modalities
  • Treatment

15
Incidence
  • Ranges from 2-10 per 100,000 person-years
  • Evidence of dissection is found in 1-3 of all
    autopsies

16
Whos affected?
  • International Registry of Acute Aortic Dissection
    (IRAD)
  • 65 men
  • mean age 63yrs
  • Women tend to present older (67 vs. 60yrs)
  • Highest incidence in patients 50 to 70 years old.
  • Male-to-female ratio 21
  • Half of dissections in females before age 40
    occur during pregnancy

17
Mortality
  • When left untreated
  • 33 of patients die within the first 24 hours
  • 50 die within 48 hours
  • 75 die within 2-weeks

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Aortic dissection mimickers
  • Myocardial ischemia due to an acute coronary
    syndrome with or without ST segment elevation
  • Pericarditis
  • Pulmonary embolus
  • Aortic regurgitation without dissection
  • Aortic aneurysm without dissection
  • Musculoskeletal pain
  • Mediastinal tumors
  • Pleuritis
  • Cholecystitis
  • Atherosclerotic or cholesterol embolism
  • Peptic ulcer disease or perforating ulcer
  • Acute pancreatitis

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Aortic Dissection
  • Background
  • Epidemiology
  • Clinical characteristics
  • Diagnostic Modalities
  • Treatment

20
Predisposing factors
  • Older patients
  • HTN (72 of IRAD patients)
  • Younger patients
  • Pre-existing aneurysm (13)
  • Inflammatory disease (giant cell, takayasu, RA,
    syphilitic aortitis)
  • Collagen disorders (Marfans 50 of pts lt40,
    Ehlers-Danlos, Pseudoxanthoma elasticum
  • Coarctation (Turners syndrome)
  • Family history (up to 19 of pts, of mutations
    identified)
  • Bicuspid aortic valve
  • Trauma/Iatrogenic
  • Crack cocaine, (37 in largely AA, inner-city
    population study)
  • mean duration from last cocaine use 12 hours.
    Mechanism may be abrupt, transient hypertension
    due to catecholamine release.

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Clinical Features
  • Abrupt onset of severe, sharp or "tearing"
    posterior chest or back pain (70-90)
  • Pulse deficit
  • weak/absent carotid, brachial, or femoral pulse
    resulting from intimal flap or compression by
    hematoma
  • HTN at initial presentation is more common in
    those with a type B dissection (70 vs 36)

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If dissection involves ascending aorta
  • Acute aortic insufficiency --gt diastolic
    decrescendo murmur, hypotension, or heart failure
    (1/2 to 2/3 of pts)
  • Acute MI due to coronary occlusion (1-2). RCA
    most commonly involved (L main ? sudden death)
    and, in infrequent cases, leads to complete heart
    block.
  • Tamponade
  • Hemothorax (if extends through adventitia)
  • Stroke (if involves carotids)
  • Horner syndrome (compression of superior cervical
    sympathetic ganglion) or vocal cord paralysis
    (compression of the left recurrent laryngeal
    nerve)

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Diagnosis
  • An analysis of 250 patients with acute chest
    and/or back pain (128 with a dissection) found
    that 96 percent of acute aortic dissections could
    be identified based upon some combination of the
    following
  • 1. Abrupt onset of thoracic or abdominal pain
    with a sharp, tearing and/or ripping character
  • 2. Mediastinal and/or aortic widening on chest
    radiograph
  • 3. A variation in pulse (absence of a proximal
    extremity or carotid pulse) and/or blood pressure
    (gt20 mmHg difference between the right and left
    arm)
  • The incidence of dissection related to the
    presence or absence of these three
  • All three absent 7
  • Pain alone 31
  • Presence of chest radiographic abnormalities 39
  • Variation in pulse or blood pressure
    differential 83
  • Any two out of three variables 83

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Aortic Dissection
  • Background
  • Epidemiology
  • Clinical characteristics
  • Diagnostic Modalities
  • Treatment

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EKG Findings
  • normal (31)
  • nonspecific ST--T wave changes (30-42)
  • (commonly, LVH and strain patterns associated
    with HTN)
  • ischemic changes (15)
  • acute MI (5)
  • gt98 do not show ST elevation
  • Based on 464 IRAD patients

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Labs
  • D-dimer ?
  • 14-center international study of 220 patients (87
    with AD, 133 controls)
  • Entry criteria suspicion of AD within first
    24hrs high enough to obtain imaging
  • D-dimer levels 3213 1465 and 3574 1430 for
    type A and B respectively
  • Sensitivity 96.6, Specificity 46.6
  • -LR 0.07, NPV gt94
  • Possibility that D-dimer could be used to help
    rule-out aortic dissection

Suzuki et. al. Diagnosis of Acute Aortic
Dissection by D-Dimer. Circulation 2009 119,
2702-2707
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Imaging
  • CXR
  • mediastinal widening in 80-90 with type A
    dissections, while 11 patients had no
    abnormality
  • Usually multiple modalities required
  • 2000 IRAD review
  • most patients had multiple imaging studies
    performed (mean 1.83 per patient)
  • initial study CT 61, echo in 33, aortography in
    4, MRI in 2

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Imaging
  • CT scan
  • Fast, easily accessible
  • Sensitivity low (80), no LV fxn info, unable to
    assess AI
  • TTE
  • Able to assess LV fxn, AI
  • Low sensitivity (60-85)
  • TEE
  • Excellent sensitivity (99), AI, wall motion,
    bedside exam, identifies site of tear
  • Need operator
  • MRI
  • Excellent imaging
  • Not readily available, bad for critically ill
    patients

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Imaging
Summary of specialized imaging techniques Summary of specialized imaging techniques Summary of specialized imaging techniques Summary of specialized imaging techniques Summary of specialized imaging techniques
Angiography CT MRI TEE
Sensitivity Poor Average Excellent Excellent
Specificity Good Good Excellent Good
Site of tear Good Poor Excellent Good
Aortic Regurgitation Excellent Useless Excellent Excellent
Pericardial effusion Useless Poor Excellent Good
Coronaries Excellent Useless Good Average
Modified from Cigarroa JE et al. Modified from Cigarroa JE et al. Modified from Cigarroa JE et al. Modified from Cigarroa JE et al. Modified from Cigarroa JE et al.
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Aortic Dissection
  • Background
  • Epidemiology
  • Clinical characteristics
  • Diagnostic Modalities
  • Treatment

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Medical management
  • Untreated aortic dissection or intramural
    hematoma
  • 25 die within 24hrs
  • 50 by 48hrs
  • Basic management
  • Type A dissection ? surgery
  • Type B dissection ? medical management
  • Surgery -- prevents medial extension reaching the
    pericardium and producing fatal tamponade or
    worsening other complications

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Pre-OR management
  • Virtually all non-shocked patients require
    medical management prior to surgery
  • Aim of medical management
  • reduce the absolute pressure on the damaged
    aortic media
  • Reduce the rate of rise of that pressure (dP/dT).

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Medical management
  • Blood pressure control
  • Blood pressure control
  • Blood pressure control
  • Pain control

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Main goals of medical management
  • Systolic BP lt 100 mmHg.
  • Pain free.
  • Adequate renal perfusion (urine output gt 30
    ml/hr).
  • No evidence of cerebral hypoperfusion.
  • Minimized shear stress (ß-blocked to lt 55/min).

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Antihypertensive choice
  • Labetalol for beta blockade
  • Nitroprusside if HR controlled but SBP still
    gt100mmHg

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Antihypertensive choice
  • Start with ß-blockers
  • use of a vasodilator in isolation will actually
    increase aortic shear stress by widening the
    pulse pressure and the dP/dT of left ventricular
    ejection.

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Which arm to measure?
  • Blood pressure should be measured in the arm with
    the highest reading.

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References
  • Davies, Crispin Bashir, Yaver Shively.
    Cardiovascular Emergencies. London, GBR BMJ
    Publishing Group, 2001. p151-172
  • Manning, Warren. Clinical manifestations and
    diagnosis of aortic dissection. UptoDate
  • Suzuki et. al. Diagnosis of Acute Aortic
    Dissection by D-Dimer. Circulation 2009 119,
    2702-2707
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