Aneurysms and Dissection Flashcards

1
Q

describe a true vs. false aneurysm

A
  • true aneurysm:
    • involve the 3 layers of the vessel wall
    • the blood remains within the confines of the circulatory system
    • atherosclerotic, syphilitic, congenital aneurysm
  • false (pseudoaneurysm)
    • is an extravascular hematoma that communicates with the intravascular space
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2
Q

describe a fusiform aneurysm

A
  • fusiform:
    • diffuse, circumferential dilations of a long vascular segment, more common than saccular
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3
Q

describe a saccular aneurysm

A
  • saccular:
    • spherical outpouchings involving only a portion of the vessel wall
    • often contain thrombus
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4
Q

the most common site of an atherosclerotic aneurysm is the _____

A

the most common site of an atherosclerotic aneurysm is the abdominal aorta

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5
Q

describe the pathogenesis of atherosclerotic aneurysm

A
  • local MMPs produced by macrophages degrade all the components of ECM in the arterial wall; collagen, elastin, proteoglycans, laminin, fibronectin
  • deficiency of tissue inhibitor of proteinases
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6
Q

atherosclerotic aneurysm pathogenesis:

_____ produced by macrophages degrade all the components of the ECM; this is caused by a deficiency of _____

A

local MMPs produced by macrophages degrade all the components of the ECM; this is caused by a deficiency of tissue inhibitor of proteinases

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7
Q

describe the gross and histological changes seen in atherosclerotic aneurysms

A
  • gross:
    • most are distal to renal arteries and prox. to the bifurcation
    • usually fusiform, may be saccular
    • majority are lined by raised, ulcerated, and calcified (complicated) atherosclerotic lesions
  • histo:
    • reveals destruction of the normal arterial wall and its replacement by fibrous tissue
    • thickened and focally inflamed adventitia
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8
Q

describe the clinical course of an atherosclerotic aneurysm

A
  • many aneurysms are asymptomatic
  • abdominal mass
  • occlusion of a branch vessel (renal, mesenteric, vertebral vessels)
  • embolism from atheroma or mural thrombus
  • impingement on an adjacent structure
    • compression of ureter or erosion of vertebrae
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9
Q

the risk of rupture of an atherosclerotic aneurysm is related to _____ and can be secondarily infected by ____

explain this

A

the risk of rupture of an atherosclerotic aneurysm is related to size and can be secondarily infected by Salmonella

  • 25-40% for aneurysms larger than 6 cm
  • can be secondarily infected by Salmonella
    • complication of mycotic aneurysm
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10
Q

syphilitic aneurysms usually affect the _____

explain this

A

syphilitic aneurysms usually affect the thoracic aorta

  • the inflammatory response to the bacteria → obliterative endarteritis of the vasa vasorum of the aorta → narrowing of their lumen → ischemic injury of the elastic tunica media in the aorta → medial destruction and weakening followed by chronic inflam. and scarring
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11
Q

describe the morphology of syphilitic aneurysms

A
  • fibrosis of the vascular wall can give involved vessels a tree bark appearance
  • wrinkling of aortic intima due to secondary atherosclerosis may narrow or occlude coronary ostea
  • aortic valve ring dilation, resulting in valvular insufficiency
  • aortic valvular insufficiency → massive hypertrophy of LV referred as cor bovinum (cow’s heart)
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12
Q

describe the clinical course of syphilitic aneurysms

A
  • encroachment on the mediastinal structures:
    • resp. difficulties
    • diff. in swallowing
    • persistent cough → recurrent laryngeal n. compression
  • pain caused by erosion of the ribs or vertebrae
  • aortic incompetence → LVH → CHF (most common cause of death)
  • cardiac ischemia due to obstruction to coronary ostia
  • rupture of the aneurysm
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13
Q

describe congenital aneurysms caused by Marfan Syndrome

A
  • AD mutation in the gene fibrillin-1
    • required for normal elastic tissue development
  • other features of Marfans Syndrome
    • skeletal abnormalities
      • elongated axial bones, very tall and slender
      • lower body is more than upper body length
      • long thin extremities and finger
    • ocular findings
      • subluxation of the lens (ciliary body is rich in fibrillin)
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14
Q
A
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15
Q

describe Berry aneurysm

A
  • developmental thin-walled aneurysms in the circle of Willis (anterior cerebral artery branches)
  • develop over time because the arterial media is congenitally attenuated
  • rupture at any time but often during increased intracranial pressure → subarachnoid hemorrhage → severe headache, coma
  • associated with polycystic kidney disease
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16
Q

Berry aneurysms are associated with _____

A

Berry aneurysms are associated with polycystic kidney disease

17
Q

list the most common sites of Berry aneurysms

A
18
Q

describe an aortic dissection

A
  • entry of blood in between and along the laminar planes of media and its extension along the length of the vessel
  • often rupture causing massive hemorrhage
19
Q

describe the 2 groups of people commonly affected by aortic dissection

A
  • commonly seen in 2 groups of people:
    • 40-60 years old with HTN (90% of cases)
    • younger population w/ CT disease
      • e.g. Marfans
20
Q

describe the etiopathogenesis of aortic dissection (4)

A
  • hypertension:
    • HTN → hypertrophy of vasa vasora (causing narrowing) → ECM degenerative changes and variable loss of medial smooth muscle cells (pressure and ischemia both play a role)
  • abnormality of CT:
    • Marfan’s syndrome, ED syndrome
  • complication of arterial cannulation:
    • e.g. during diagnostic catheterization or cardiopulmonary bypass
  • pregnancy induced
    • hormone-induced vascular remodeling
    • perinatal hemodynamic stresses
21
Q

describe the proximal lesions (Type A) vs. distal lesions (Type B) in aortic dissections

A
  • proximal lesions (Type A)
    • more common, involve the ascending aorta
    • high mortality
    • needs rapid medical and surgical treatment
  • distal lesions (Type B)
    • involve the descending aorta distal to the left subclavian artery
    • better prognosis, can be managed conservatively
22
Q

describe clinical features of aortic dissection

A
  • sudden onset chest pain:
    • tearing in nature
    • radiates to the back (felt between scapulae) and moving down as the dissection progress
  • loss of one or more arterial pulses
23
Q

describe the gross morphological changes seen in aortic dissection

A
  • gross:
    • intimal tear, transverse, sharp, jagged
    • it separates the inner 2/3 of the aorta from the outer 1/3
    • external rupture → hemorrhage, tamponade
    • rupture into the lumen → double-barreled aorta
24
Q

describe the histological changes seen in the aortic dissection

A
  • cystic medial degeneration: lesions consists of focal loss of elastic & muscle fibers in the media → cystic spaces filled with a myxoid material
  • inflammation is absent
25
Q
A