Title: Vascular Surgery Back to Basics
1Vascular SurgeryBack to Basics
- Dr. Srinidhi Jayaram
- Vascular Fellow
- Division of Vascular Endovascular Surgery
- The Ottawa Hospital
2OUTLINE
- Acute limb ischemia
- Claudication
- Critical limb ischemia
- Carotid Artery Disease
- Aortic Aneurysm
- Aortic dissection
- Varicose veins, Chronic venous insuffciency,
Superficial thrombophlebitis
3Mrs. Witelegg
- ID
- 75 yo lady who lives by herself in an apartment.
She is active, walks her dog 2 kms daily without
any difficulty. She takes pride in the fact that
she has not needed to see a doctor in the last 10
years. - PMHx/PMSx
- remote TAH-BSO
- social smoker quit in the 1960s
- no h/o DM, CAD, HTN, dyslipidemia, stroke, CRF
Acute Limb Ischemia
4Mrs. Witelegg
- HPI
- While watching TV, she had sudden onset of
numbness in her right leg. Her leg felt like it
went dead, and she couldnt ambulate. After a
few minutes she experienced constant, severe pain
starting in the toes, eventually involving the
entire right leg. She called her neighbor and
then brought her in to the Civic emergency
department.
Acute Limb Ischemia
5Mrs. Witelegg
- What is Acute limb Ischemia?
- An abrupt cessation of arterial blood flow to an
extremity resulting in hypoperfusion of tissue,
threatening limb viability
Acute Limb Ischemia
6Mrs. Witelegg
- O/E
- She is in distress from pain in R leg
- BP140/90 mmHg, HR150 bpm
- pulse irregularly irregular
- Normal heart sounds, good a/e bilat
- No pulsatile masses in her abdomen
- No carotid, abdominal or femoral bruits
- Pulses
- L femoral, politeal, DP, PT
- R - femoral, - popliteal, - DP, - PT
- R foot is colder and paler than L
- Decreased sensation in R foot
- Able to move toes but difficulty with plantar and
dorsi flexion - Absence of trophic changes in her lower
extremities (no hair loss, thickened nails, or
thin, flaky or shiny skin)
Acute Limb Ischemia
7Mrs. Witelegg
- What are the 6 Ps of Acute Limb Ischemia
- Pain
- Palor
- Polar/poikilothermia
- Paraesthesia
- Paralysis
- Pulselessness
Acute Limb Ischemia
8Mrs. Witelegg
- Classify Acute Limb Ischemia. In which category
is Mrs. Witelegg?
Class Sensory deficit Motor deficit Prognosis
1 None None Not immediately threatened
2a Mild-moderate None Salvageable if treated promptly
2b Significant Mild-moderate Salvageable if immediately treated
3 Profound Profound Irreversible limb damage- likely amputation
Acute Limb Ischemia
9Mrs. Witelegg
- Your working diagnosis is acute limb ischemia.
- You order CBC, electrolytes, BUN, Cr, PTT/INR
(all of which comes back normal), type and
cross-match blood, and a saline infusion is
started. - CXR is unremarkable
- ECG is as follows
Acute Limb Ischemia
10Mrs. Witelegg
- Before you call the vascular surgeon on-call,
what test can you do at the bed side that can
objectively assess acute limb ischemia? - Ankle Brachial index
- Measure brachial pressure (example 160 mmHg)
- Measure ankle pressure (example 80 mmHg)
- Divide ankle by brachial pressure (exmple 80/160
0.5 anything lt0.9 is abnormal)
Acute Limb Ischemia
11Mrs. Witelegg
- What is the most likely etiology of ALI in Mrs.
Witelegg? - Cardiogenic embolism
- What in her history and physical supports this
diagnosis? - Lack of atherosclerotic risk factors
- no previous claudication (she walked her dog 2
km/day) - Irregularly irregular pulse
- Completely normal left extremity pulses
- Based on her physical examination, what is the
highest point of obstruction of arterial flow? - R ileo-femoral region
- How long can a limb be without blood flow before
irreversible tissue damage ensues? - 4-6 hrs
Acute Limb Ischemia
12Mrs. Witelegg
- What is the surgical management of this
condition? - R femoral embolectomy
- Can we proceed to the OR without any imaging
studies? If not what studies can be perfomed? - Because of the classic history and physical
findings, and because of the presence of class 2b
ischemia, immediate surgery is indicated without
delay for imaging. - Angiography can be performed in certain
conditions of ALI - when the suspected etiology is arterial
thrombosis (i.e. in preparation for bypass
surgery) - when the patient has class 1 or 2a ischemia
Acute Limb Ischemia
13Mrs. Witelegg
- What medical therapy is available for ALI and
when is it indicated? - Lytic therapy (i.e. with t-PA) is used to
dissolve the clot. It is a good option in the
setting of acute arterial or graft thrombosis.
It is not indicated in the setting of trauma or
when the patient can not wait more than 24-48
hrs, as the therapy requires that period of time
for clot dissolution. ( i.e. class 1 or early 2a
ischemia) - IV Heparin will not dissolve the clot but will
prevent further propagation, and is only
indicated if there is a delay to surgery
14Mrs. Witelegg
- The patient is booked for emergency embolectomy
- Under local anaesthesia, a small incision is made
over the R groin. The femoral artery is exposed
and controlled with vessel loops. A small
arteriotomy is made and the clot is removed
proximally and distally using a fogarty balloon
embolectomy catheter. - The arteriotomy is repaired and the foot pinks
up after blood flow is returned. There is a
palpable DP and PT pulse. - The patient is returned to the recovery room.
Acute Limb Ischemia
15Mrs. Witelegg
- At 3 am you get paged by the recovery room nurse.
Mrs. W is complaining of significant pain in her
leg, it is more swollen and the DP and PT are no
longer palpable. - In addition, her urine output has diminished and
she is peeing out dark urine which tested
positive for blood on the urine dipstick.
Acute Limb Ischemia
16Mrs. Witelegg
- What is happening to Mrs. W?
- Reperfusion syndrome occurs as a result of blood
flow going back into previously damaged tissue,
causing rhabdomyolysis and compartment syndrome..
- Rhabdomyolysis Liberated myoglobin from dead
muscle cells enters the blood stream resulting in
renal tubular obstruction and direct
nephrotoxicity causing renal failure.
Myoglobinuria is a false positive on the urine
dipstick test for blood. - Compartment syndrome Free oxygen radicals are
created with reperfusion. These result in
increased tissue edema, with in the limited
facial compartments of the lower leg, this
further decreases capillary blood flow and
worsens the ischemia and tissue damage, causing
further edema. Pain out of proportion, pain on
passive stretch and high pressures in the
compartments suggests compartment syndrome.
Acute Limb Ischemia
17Mrs. Witelegg
- How should reperfusion syndrome be managed?
- Compartment syndrome is a surgical emergency and
is managed by 4-compartment fasciotomies. - Rhabdomyolysis should be managed with aggressive
IV fluids, diuresis and alkalinization of urine.
Acute Limb Ischemia
18Peripheral Vascular Disease
19Peripheral Vascular Disease
- Claudication
- Critical Limb Ischemic
- Rest pain
- Ulcers
- Gangrene
20Etiology
- blockages in arteries to lower extremities due to
atherosclerosis - Risk factors
- smoking
- DM
- HTN
- hyperlipidemia
- family history
- obesity
- sedentary
- male gender
21Clinical Features - Claudication
- Pain with exertion (usually calves)
- relieved by short rest - two to five minutes
- reproducible
- P/E
- hair loss, hypertrophic nails, atrophic muscle
- pulses may be absent at some locations
22Investigations
- Ankle Brachial Index
- Duplex
- Ct angio/ Angiogram
23Treatment
- CONSERVATIVE
- risk factor modification ( smoking cessation)
- exercise program
- cilostazol , Trental (Pentoxifylline)
- anti platelet (ECASA, clopidrogel) for MI /
stroke risk - Statin
- ACE inhibitor
- surgical
- indications claudication interfering with
lifestyle - options endovascular, PTA, arterial bypass
grafts
24CRITICAL LIMB ISCHEMIA
25Clinical Features - Critical limb ischemia
- Pain at rest in foot, worse at night
- Improved with dependant postion
- Ischemic ulcers
- gangrene
- P/E
- Pulse deficits
- hair loss, hypertrophic nails, atrophic muscle
- ruborous foot
26Investigations
- Ankle Brachial Index
- Duplex ultrasound
- Ct angio/Angiogram
27Treatment
- Surgical
- bypass
- gortex vs vein
- Endovascular balloon angioplasty
- limited durability
- less morbid
28Cerebrovascular Disease
29CAROTID STENOSIS
- Presentation
- Asymptomatic
- Bruit (only 20 hemodynamically significant
lesion) - Screening prior to other surgery
30Presentation
- Symptomatic
- TIA, Stroke
- Amaurosis fugax ipsilateral to carotid lesion
- Contralateral motor or sensory deficit
- Facial droop
- Dysphasia or aphasia
31Investigations
- Duplex Scan
- CT scan - confirm or r/o infarct
- CT/Angio Confirm U/S plan
- MRA Similar to CT
- Angiogram
32Management
- Asymptomatic
- - Risk factor reduction(asa,statin,ACE)
- observation with regular duplex scans
- Antiplatelet agent and surgery more controversial
- ACAS ? 60 ? OR
- Canada ? ?80 male, under 75 yrs or ? operate
33- Symptomatic
- Carotid Stenosis ? 70
- TIA, Small completed stroke with minimal residual
neurologic deficit, - ? antiplatelet agent carotid endarterectomy
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37AORTIC DISSECTION
Vascular Surgery Back to Basics
38Definition
- spontaneous tear in aortic intima allowing blood
to be driven between the aortic intima and media - acute lt 2 weeks
- chronic gt 2 weeks
39Classification
- DeBakey
- Type I - involves ascending and descending aorta
- Type II - ascending aorta only
- Type IIIA - descending thoracic aorta
- Type IIIB - Type IIIA plus abdominal aorta
- Standford
- Type A - ascending aorta and aortic arch
emergency - Type B - aorta distal to subclavian artery
emergency surgery if complications of dissection
40Etiology
- HYPERTENSION, usually uncontrolled
- TRAUMA, usually deceleration injury (falls, MVAs)
- other cystic medial necrosis, atherosclerosis,
connective tissue disease (Marfans syndrome,
Ehlers-Danlos syndromes), congenital conditions
(coarctation of aorta, bicuspid aortic valves,
PDA), infection, arteritis (Takayasus)
41Epidemiology
- incidence 5.2 in 1,000,000
- malefemale 31
- small increased incidence in African-Canadians
(related to higher incidence of hypertension) - lowest incidence in Asians
42Clinical Features
- SUDDEN ONSET SEVERE CHEST PAIN RADIATION TO THE
BACK (INTERSCAPULAR) /-.... - hypertension
- asymmetric BPs and pulses between arms
- ischemic syndromes due to occlusion of aortic
branches coronary (MI), carotid (stroke,
Horners syndrome), splanchnic (ischemic gut),
renal (kidney failure) - unseating of aortic valve cusps (new diastolic
murmur) - rupture into pleura (dyspnea, hemoptysis) or
peritoneum (hypotension, shock) or pericardium
(tamponade) - lower limb ischemia (cold legs)
43Investigations
- CT scan is gold standard
- CXR
- pleural cap
- widened mediastinum
- left pleural effusion with extravasation of blood
- TEE
- ECG LVH (90), /- MI, pericarditis, heart
block - aortography, MRI
44Treatment
- Type A
- EMERGENCY CARDIAC SURGERY
- may require putting patient on pump, hypothermic
circulatory arrest, valve replacement, coronary
re-implantation of aortic root - resection of intimal tear, reconstitution of flow
through true lumen, replacement of the affected
aorta with graft - Type B
- MEDICAL MANAGEMENT
- very rarely urgent operation for complications
(expansion, rupture, gut/leg/renal ischemia,
ongoing pain
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47AORTIC ANEURYSM
48Definition
- localized dilation of an artery that is 2 x its
normal diameter - true aneurysm involving all vessel wall layers
- false aneurysm disruption of aortic wall with
containment of blood by some layers of the aorta
or a fibrous capsule made of surrounding tissue
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50Etiology
- DEGENERATIVE (matrix metalloproteinases)
- atherosclerosis association
- infection
- cystic medial necrosis
- trauma
- vascultitis
- connective tissue disease (Marfan syndrome,
Ehlers-Danlos)
51Epidemiology
- incidence 5 to 32 per 100,000 for AAA
- high risk groups
- 65 years and older
- malefemale 41
- smokers
- peripheral vascular disease, CAD, CVD
- family history of AAA
52Clinical Features
- Vast majority ASYMPTOMATIC
-
- RUPTURE
- back pain
- hypotension/syncope
- pulsatile abdominal mass
- 100 mortality if untreated
53Investigations
- abdominal US (100 sensitive)
- CT
- Aortogram (false negative normal lumen size due
to thrombus formation)
54Treatment
- Risk of rupture depends on size
- lt5 cm lt5 / yr
- 5-6 cm 10 / yr
- 6-7 cm 15-20 / yr
- gt7 cm gt20 / yr
- Risk of dying from aneurysm surgery 5
55Treatment
- Operate when
- AAA reaches 5.5 cm in an otherwise healthy
individual - gt5 mm expansion in 6 months
- symptomatic AAA
- Rupture
- contraindications life expectancy lt 1 year,
terminal disease (cancer), significant
co-morbidities (recent MI, unstable angina),
severe dementia, advanced age
56Treatment Surgical
- Surgical options
- open surgery with graft replacement
- Endovascular aneurysm repair
57Ruptured Aortic Aneurysm
- EMERGENCY
- clinical diagnosis class diagnostic triad (50
cases) - sudden onset back pain
- shock (syncope/hypotension)
- pulsatile mass
- U/S in emerg or CT if stable
- IV access, start fluid resuscitation, cross and
match - EMERGENCY LAPAROTOMY and CLAMP AORTA
- Prognosis
- 100 mortality untreated, OR mortality rate 50
90 total mortality
58Venous disease
59Venous Reflux
60Varicose veins
Ulceration
Hyperpigmentation
Lipodermatosclerosis
Ankle Flare
Stasis Dermatitis
61Varicose veins
62Definition
- distended torturous superficial veins due to
incompetent valves in the deep, superficial or
perforator systems - distribution greater saphenous vein and
tributaries
63Etiology
- primary
- main factor inherited structural weakness of
valves - contributing factors age, female, OCP use,
occupations requiring long hours of standing,
pregnancy, obesity - secondary
- deep vein thrombosis
- congenital anomalies
- arteriovenous fistula
64Epidemiology
- 10 - 20 of the population
- gt50 over the age of 50
65Clinical Features
- History
- Ankle ache
- Fatigued legs
- swelling around the ankles
- aggravated by prolongued standing (end of day)
- P/E
- dilated and tortuous superfical veins
- Brodie-Trendelendberg test
- raise leg and compress saphenous vein at thigh
have patient stand if vein fills quickly from
top down then incompetent valves use mulitple
tourniquets to localize incompetent veins
66Trendelenberg test
67Complications
- Usually benign natural history
- Most are cosmetic concerns
- recurrent superficial thrombophlebitis
- Up to 15 of venous ulcers can be from
superficial vein incompetence
68Investigations
- Duplex ultrasound to assess...
- reflux of blood at sapheno-femoral junction
69Reflux (with Valsalva)
70Treatment
- Compression stocking therapy
- Saphenous vein stripping surgery
- disabling symptoms
- Laser vein ablation
- Foam sclerotherapy
71Chronic Venous Insufficiency
72Definition
- chronic elevation of deep venous pressure and
blood pooling in lower extremities
73Etiology
- valvular incompetence may be due to a previous
DVT many years ago - chronic venous obstruction
- calf muscle pump dysfunction
74Clinical Features
- ankle ache and edema - relieved by foot elevation
- hyperpigmentation (hemosiderin deposits)
- ulceration
- shallow and irregular
- above medial malleolus
75Investigations
- duplex ultrasound to assess
- Reflux at sapheno-femoral junction
- Deep system incompetence
- chronic occlusion from an old DVT/trauma
- Venogram
76Treatment
- CONSERVATIVE
- compression stockings/layered compression
bandages - leg elevation, avoid prolonged standing
- surgical
- surgical ligation of perforators in region of
ulcer, greater saphenous vein stripping if
incompetent
77Superficial Thrombophlebitis
78Definition
- inflammation secondary to acute thrombosis of a
superficial vein usually the greater saphenous
vein
79Etiology
- varicose veins
- migratory superficial thrombophlebitis
- hematologic hypercoag state, polycythemia,
thrombocytosis - neoplastic occult malignancy (especially
pancreas) - idiopathic
80Clinical Features
- Usually involves GSV and its branches
- pain
- swelling along course of involved vein
- erythema
- warmth
81Investigations
- Ultrasound to exclude associated DVT (5 - 10)
82Treatment
- CONSERVATIVE
- moist heat, compression bandages
- anti-inflammatory and anti-platelet (ASA)