Abdominal aortic aneurysm Flashcards

1
Q

Define abdominal aortic aneurysm

A

a permanent pathological dilation of the aorta with a diameter >1.5 times the expected anteroposterior (AP) diameter of that segment

  • given the patient’s sex and body size
  • usually 3cm in size
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2
Q

Below which arteries do 90% of aneurysms originate?

A

renal arteries (infra-renal)

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3
Q

What are the risk factors of AAA?

A
  • smoking
  • family history
  • increased age
  • sex (male = incidence; female = rupture)
  • congenital disorders e.g. bicuspid aortic valves (Aortic degeneration is accelerated)
  • connective tissue disorders e.g. Marfan’s
  • pregnancy (Aortic degeneration is accelerated)
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4
Q

How does Marfan’s syndrome cause predisposition to AAA?

A

autosomal dominant anomaly in fibrillin type 1

–> cystic medial necrosis of the aorta

–> aorta = abnormal elasticity

–> progressive stiffening + dilation

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5
Q

What is the epidemiology of AAA?

A

male prevalence = 4x female white smokers increasing age

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6
Q

What are the presenting symptoms of an intact AAA?

A

most patients are asymptomatic; AAA is detected incidentally

uncommon:

  • abdominal pain
  • back pain
  • groin pain
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7
Q

What are the presenting symptoms of a ruptured AAA?

A

Triad of:

  • abdominal and/or back pain
  • pulsatile abdominal mass,
  • hypotension
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8
Q

What are the signs of an intact AAA on examination?

A
  • usually asymptomatic
  • pulsatile, expantile abdominal mass
  • ~’trash feet’ - discolouration of toes 2° to emboli from aortic thrombus
  • severely obese patients: unlikely for signs to be present (aorta is retroperitoneal)
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9
Q

What are the primary investigations to be ordered if an AAA is suspected?

A

Abdominal US

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10
Q

What are the secondary investigations to be considered if an AAA is suspected?

A
  • ESR/CRP (–> inflammatory AAA)
  • FBC (Leukocytosis + ~anaemia –> infectious AAA)
  • blood cultures (+ ^^ –> infectious AAA)
  • CT angiography (–> signs of rupture)
  • MR(I) angiography (useful from pre-op strategy if patient has iodine contrast allergy)
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11
Q

What

a) type of radiography is used to detect a ruptured AAA?
b) are the signs of a ruptured AAA?

A

a) CT angiography:

b)

  • retroperitoneal haematoma
  • discontinuity of aortic wall
  • extravasation of contrast into peritoneal cavity
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