Diseases of the Great Vessels - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 97
About This Presentation
Title:

Diseases of the Great Vessels

Description:

Diseases of the Great Vessels – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:140
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 98
Provided by: Vermi4
Category:
Tags: awn | diseases | great | vessels

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Diseases of the Great Vessels


1
Diseases of theGreat Vessels
2
Diseases of the Great Vessels
Definition
  • Ascending Aorta
  • Transverse Aortic Arch
  • Descending Thoracic Aorta
  • Supra-Renal Aorta
  • Infra-Renal Aorta

3
Diseases of the Great Vessels
  • Atherosclerosis
  • Thromboangiitis
  • Nonspecific Arteritis (Takayasus)
  • Fibrodysplasia
  • Uncommon Arteriopathies
  • Marfan Syndrome
  • Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome
  • Cystic medial necrosis
  • Aneurysms, Dissecting and True

4
Aortic Dissection
  • Epidemiology
  • 3.5 per 100,000 person-years
  • MaleFemale 51
  • Peak incidence Type A 50 60 yrs.
  • Peak Incidence Type B 60 70 yrs.
  • 75 Hypertensive

5
Aortic Dissection
  • Etiology
  • 7 -14 Bicuspid Aortic Valve with Aortic Root
    dilatation
  • Coarctation, Arteritis, Aortic Ectasia, Turner or
    Noonan syndrome, Marfans, Ehlers-Danlos, Aortic
    Hypoplasia, Cocaine Use
  • gt 40 y.o. Marfans syndrome most common
  • gt 40 y.o. Callogen/Elastin Deterioration
  • Women lt40 y.o., 50 during pregnancy
  • Rupture of Intima and Media

6
(No Transcript)
7
(No Transcript)
8
Aortic Dissection
  • Complications
  • Shock
  • Malperfusion Syndrome

9
Malperfusion Syndrome
10
Malperfusion Syndrome
  • 512 Dissections (Mayo Clinic)
  • 29 strokes
  • 11 arm ischemia
  • 5 paralysis
  • 19 mesentaric ischemia
  • 23 renal failure
  • 62 L.E. Ischemia
  • 149 Total

11
Aortic Dissection
  • Diagnosis
  • Chest Pain, Hemoptysis, Dysphagia, Hematemasis,
    Hoarseness
  • Differential is large
  • CXR
  • Non-specific rarely diagnostic
  • Angio
  • Former gold standard
  • 88 sensitive, 85 specific
  • Time consuming invasive

12
Aortic Dissection
  • Diagnosis (cont)
  • TEE
  • 98 sensitive, 80 specific
  • Bedside capable, easy to use
  • Can be used in the O.R.
  • Downside blind spots caused by trachea
    bronchus, cant see beyond diaphragm
  • MRI
  • 95 to 100 sensitive and specific
  • Long exam time, cant monitor well
  • Pacers, metal a problem

13
Aortic Dissection
  • CT scan
  • 87 sensitive, 93 specific
  • Should be done on all patients
  • Spiral C.T. with contrast
  • False lumen usually has thrombus

14
(No Transcript)
15
Aortic Dissection
STANFORD B POSTERIOR
DISSECTION WITH ANEURYSMAL DILATATION
16
Aortic Dissection
TRUE LUMEN
FALSE LUMEN
17
Acute Aortic Dissection
STANFORD B POSTERIOR DISSECTION
18
Aortic Dissection
  • Principles of Treatment
  • Type A Usually prompt repair
  • Mortality 1 per hour
  • Type B
  • Rupture uncommon
  • Medical Rx preferred unless perfusion syndrome
    present
  • Endovascular stenting may have a role

19
Aortic Dissection
  • Medical Therapy
  • Reduce Hemodynamic forces
  • Beta BlockerEsmolol
  • 500 microgram/Kg bolus
  • Infuse 50 200 microgm/kg/min drip
  • Then control systolic pressure if needed
  • Nipride 20 800 microgm/min
  • Serial CTs, Hb, creat, circ checks

20
Great Vessels
21
Aneurysms of the Great Vessels
  • Definition
  • Any artery that exceeds 150 the size of the
    normal vessel proximal or distal to it.
  • Clinically Significant aneurysm
  • Any artery that exceeds 200 the size of the
    normal vessel proximal or distal to it.

22
Aneurysmal Disease Etiology
  • Medial Matrix Degeneration or Disruption
  • Aging
  • Atherosclerosis
  • Infection
  • Inflammation
  • Trauma
  • Congenital Abnormalities
  • Smoking
  • Genetic predisposition
  • Impaired Connective tissue repair
  • Hemodynamic Factors

23
Arterial Wall Layers
24
Mechanism of Aneurysm Formation
  • MMPs Matrix Metalloprotinases
  • Family of connective tissue-degrading enzymes
    that affect tissue remodeling
  • gt25 known MMPs
  • MMP-2, MMP-7, MMP-9, MMP-12, degrade elastin
  • Expressed by mesenchymal cells i.e. vascular
    endothelium, SMCs, fibroblasts
  • Regulation of MMP activities prevents wide-spread
    tissue distruction

25
Mechanism of Aneurysm Formation
26
Aneurysms of the Descending Thoracic Aorta
  • Etiology Elastin Disruption
  • Atherosclerosis
  • Infection
  • Trauma
  • Dissection
  • 5 yr. Rupture Rate _at_ 6cm.80
  • Enlarge and rupture _at_ greater rate than AAA
  • Sx Asymptomatic, Chest pain, Hoarseness,
    Hemoptysis, Dysphagia, Hematemasis
  • Rx Surgery Open or Endovascular

27
(No Transcript)
28
Thoracoabdominal Aortic Aneurysm
29
(No Transcript)
30
TAAA Etiology
  • Matrix Degeneration 82
  • Dissection 17
  • Marfans
  • Ehlers-Danlos 1
  • Mycotic
  • Takayasus

31
TAAA Distribution
Crawford classification
32
TAAA (Type B) Symptoms at presentation
33
TAAA Diagnosis
  • Pain
  • CXR
  • CT Scan
  • MRI
  • Angio

34
(No Transcript)
35
(No Transcript)
36
(No Transcript)
37
TAAA Natural History without Repair
94 pts
38
TAAA Natural History with Repair
604 pts
39
(No Transcript)
40
(No Transcript)
41
TAAA Mortality
  • Acute Dissection gt Chronic Dissection
  • Patent False Lumen gt Thrombosed Lumen
  • Prox. Lt. Subclavian gt Distal Lt. Subclavian

42
TAAA Surgical Complications
  • Pulmonary 33.0
  • Death 9.6
  • M.I. 7.2
  • Paralysis 6.0
  • CVA 4.8
  • Renal Failure 2.4

43
TAAA Spinal Cord Injury
  • CSF Pressure lt 10 mm Hg.
  • Steroids
  • Mannitol

44
Infra-renal Aortic Aneurysms
45
Aortic Aneurysm Classification
  • True Aneurysms
  • Saccular
  • Fusiform
  • False Aneurysms
  • Not all layers of the arterial wall ( intima,
    media, adventitia) are present
  • One or more layers of the arterial wall have been
    disrupted

46
Anatomy Pathophysiology True Aneurysm
Classification
Fusiform
Saccular
47
Risk Factors
  • Males (80)
  • People over age 55
  • Smokers (Smoked more than 100 packs in a
    lifetime)
  • 7x more likely than non-smoker to have AAA
  • Caucasians
  • People with
  • Family history of AAA (20)
  • High blood pressure
  • Diabetes
  • High cholesterol

48
Statistics - US Incidence/Prevalence
  • 200,000 new patients diagnosed with non-ruptured
    aneurysms each year
  • More than 1.5 to 2 million are estimated to have
    an undiagnosed AAA
  • Up to 50 of patients with untreated aneurysms
    gt5.5 cm will die of rupture in a 5-year period
  • Over 15,000 deaths each year

49
Aortic Aneurysm Natural History
  • Mortality of Rupture 35-75
  • Unchanged over past 4 decades
  • Worse with COPD, Multiple co-morbidities
  • Average rate of growth
  • 0.4 cm/year
  • 10 per year
  • Accelerated by hypertention

50
Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm
J Vasc Surg 2003371106-17
51
Rupture Risk of Untreated Aneurysms
Infrarenal Aortic Aneuryms, in Vascular Surgery
52
AAA Symptoms
  • Most nonruptured AAA patients asymptomatic at
    diagnosis
  • Vague abdominal pain with back painmost common
    complaint
  • Constant or throbbing
  • Rapid abdominal expansion may cause intense pain
  • AAA should be considered for any elderly patient
    with abdominal, flank or back pain
  • GI symptoms (uncommon)
  • Early satiety, nausea, weight loss may indicate
    intestinal compression

53
AAA Diagnosis
  • History
  • Physical exam
  • Palpable, pulsating mass
  • Not effective in obese patients
  • Abdominal tenderness over Aorta
  • Bruit over Aorta
  • Abdominal Ultrasound
  • Good Screening Test
  • gt80 accurate
  • Spiral C.T. (3mm cuts)
  • Angiography ?IVUSnot for diagnosis

54
AAA Treatment Options
  • Watch and Wait
  • AAA lt5cm, asymptomatic
  • Surgical Risks gt Risk of Rupture
  • Lifestyle changes cannot reduce the size of the
    AAA
  • Open Surgical Repair
  • Endovascular Repair

55
Elective Open Surgical Repair
  • Major surgical procedure
  • Mortality 2 to 8
  • Complications
  • Pseudoaneurysms (3)
  • Erectile dysfunction (gt80)
  • Aortoenteric fistula (1-2)
  • Graft thrombosis (2)
  • Graft infection (1-2)
  • Recovery period 6 weeks to 4 months

56
Some patients never really bounce back to preop
functional status following surgical repair
57
Mayo Study on Open RepairEarly and Late
Graft-related complications
  • 307 patients underwent AAA repair
  • Anastomotic aneurysm 9 (3.0)
  • Graft thrombosis 6 (2.0)
  • Graft-enteric erosion/fistula 5 (1.6)
  • Graft infection 4 (1.3)
  • Anastomotic hemorrhage 4 (1.3)
  • Colon ischemia 2 (0.7)
  • Tissue loss 1 (0.3)
  • Atheroembolism 1 (0.3)

9.4 of patients had major graft-related
complications
J Vasc Surg 199725277-86
58
Endovascular AAA Repair
  • Benefits of Endovascular Repair compared to Open
    Surgery
  • Ability to treat patients unfit for open repair
  • Reduction in morbidity
  • Reduced blood loss
  • Shorter hospital stay
  • Earlier return to function

J Vasc Surg 200133S135-45
59
Types of AAA Stent Grafts
Cook Zenith
Gore Excluder
Medtronic AneuRx
60
Candidates for Endovascular Repair
  • Neck size lt28mm
  • Neck Length gt1.5cm
  • Neck Angulation lt60 degrees
  • Acceptable Neck Calcium and Thrombus
  • Acceptable Iliac Tortuosity
  • Iliac aneurysmal disease treatable
  • Iliac size Acceptable
  • Able to be converted????

61
Example of an Introduction of Device into Aorta
62
Orientation of Contralateral Gate
63
Proximal Deployment Initial Positioning
64
Proximal Deployment Final positioning
65
Distal Deployment
66
Contralateral Limb Implantation
67
Alignment of Contralateral Limb in Gate
68
Deployment of Distal Contralateral Limb
69
Implantation and Deployment Complete
70
  • Completion angiogram shows aneurysm exclusion
  • CT demonstrates thrombosis of aneurysm sac with
    arterial blood flow through stent graft

71
Endographs Risks and Complications
  • Risks
  • Radiation exposure
  • Contrast agents
  • Potential future interventions
  • Complications
  • Endoleaks
  • Migration
  • Infection

72
Endoleaks
  • Type I Graft Related ( usually at an attachment
    site)
  • Type II - Retrograde Leak, not graft related
    (most common)
  • Type III Fabric Tear
  • Type IV Graft Porosity
  • Type V endotension

73
Endoleak angio
74
Endoleak CT scan
75
Endoleak Treatment
76
Endoleak-Post embolization
77
Recommended Follow Up
78
Diseases of the Great Vessels
  • Takayasus Disease
  • Usually involves subclavian arteries pulseless
    disease

79
Aneurysms of the Ascending Aorta
Etiology
  • Medial Degeneration
  • Dissection
  • Poststenotic Dilatation
  • False Aneurysm
  • Mycotic Aneurysm
  • Atherosclerosis

95
5
0
80
Aneurysms of the Ascending Aorta
Medial Degeneration
  • Mucoid Degeneration
  • Myxomatous
  • Cystic Medial Necrosis

81
(No Transcript)
82
Aneurysms of the Ascending Aorta
Complications
  • Rupture
  • Within Pericardial Sac
  • Cardiac Tamponade
  • Tubular Arch
  • Severe Hemorrhage
  • Aortic Insufficiency
  • Death or Disability

83
(No Transcript)
84
Aneurysms of the Ascending Aorta
Treatment
  • Stabilize Medically
  • Surgical Repair
  • Valve Replacement usually necessary

85
(No Transcript)
86
Dissecting Aneurysms of the Ascending Aorta
  • 62 of Thoracic Dissections
  • Most dissect Distally
  • Acute death with rupture into pericardium, Aortic
    valve insufficiency or Coronary vessel involvement

87
Dissecting Aneurysms of the Ascending Aorta
Clinical Manifestations
  • Pain
  • Substernal or back
  • Variable B.P.
  • CXR-Widened Mediastinum

88
Dissecting Aneurysms of the Ascending Aorta
Diagnosis
  • Clinical Exam and History
  • CXR.
  • CT Scan
  • Aortography

89
Dissecting Aneurysms of the Ascending Aorta
Surgical Survival
  • 30 Day - 80
  • 5 yr. - 57
  • 10 yr. - 32
  • 20 yr. - 5

90
Aneurysms of the TransverseAortic Arch
Etiology
  • Medial Degeneration
  • Usually in association with proximal and/or
    distal aneurysmal disease

91
Aneurysms of the TransverseAortic Arch
Symptoms
  • Compression of adjacent structures
  • Airway Obstruction
  • Venous Obstruction
  • Recurrent Laryngeal Nerve Hoarseness
  • Chest Wall Pain

92
Aneurysms of the TransverseAortic Arch
Diagnosis
  • CXR
  • CT Scan
  • Angio

93
Aneurysms of the TransverseAortic Arch
Treatment
  • Replacement 78 3yr. survival

94
Diseases of the Great Vessels
  • Atherosclerosis
  • Intimal changes with focal accumulation of
    lipids, blood products, fibrous tissue, and
    calcium
  • Involves Large Vessels, not Medium and Small
    Vessels

95
(No Transcript)
96
Aortic Dissection
Type A
Type B
97
TAAA
  • Classifications
  • Crawford
  • DeBakey
  • Stanford
  • Najafi
  • University of Alabama
  • Mass. General Hospital
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com