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Updated: Sep 17 2017

Aortic Dissection

Overview
 

 
Snapshot
  •  A 32-year-old man with eunuchoid proportions and arachnodactyly presents to the ER complaining of sudden onset of severe substernal chest pain with pain radiating down his back. CXR shows a widened mediastinum.
Introduction
  • Characterized by an intimal tear in the wall of the aorta causing a second blood-filled lumen to form
  • Risk factors include
    • hypertension
    • trauma 
    • coarctation of the aorta
    • syphilis
    • Ehlers-Danlos syndrome
    • Marfan's Syndrome
    • Turner Syndrome 
    • pregnancy
    • copper deficiency
  • Prognosis
    • good to excellent if dissection is identified and treated early
    • ranges depending on location and severity of disease
Classification
  • Stanford Classifications
    • Type A
      • dissection involves the ascending aorta 
      • can include Debakey Types I, II, and III
    • Type B
      • occurs distal to the left subclavian artery
      • only includes Debakey Type III
  • Debakey Classifications
    • Type I 
      • originate in ascending aorta
      • propagate at least to the aortic arch
        • often beyond aortic arch distally
    • Type II
      • originates in and confined to the ascending aorta
    • Type III
      • originate in descending aorta
      • rarely extends proximally, but can extend distally
Presentation
  • Symptoms
    • patients classically present with the triad of 
      • acute-onset, severe, tearing chest pain radiating to the back
      • widened mediastinum on chest radiograph 
      • asymmetric, upper extremity BP and pulses
    • severe cases may present with
      • syncope
      • shock
      • sudden death
  • Physical exam
    • asymmetric, upper extremity BP and pulses
    • diastolic murmur
      • secondary to aortic regurgitation
Evaluation
  • Retrograde arteriography
    • is diagnostic gold standard
    • demonstrates double lumen of aortic dissection
  • Transesophageal echo
    • also useful in identifying aortic dissection in unstable patients
  • CT with IV contrast 
    • also useful in identifying aortic dissection  
  • EKG
    • may show LVH and ischemic changes
  • CXR
    • shows widened superior mediastinum
Differential
  • MI, PE, angina, thoracic aortic aneurysm, esophageal rupture, pancreatits, pancreatic pseudocyst, neoplasms, orthopaedic causes of back pain, appendicitis, and gallbladder disease
Treatment
  • Nonoperative
    • hemodynamic stabilization with control of HTN and tachycardia
      • indications
        • all patients in acute phase prior to surgical intervention
        • medical management alone may be considered in Type B patients who are poor surgical candidates
      • monitoring
        • paying careful attention to BP and HR to prevent further dissection/rupture
      • medications
        • labetalol and IV nitrates to control hypertension 
  • Operative
    • surgical intervention with graft placement
      • indications
        • required immediately in Type A dissections
        • Type B dissections who are good surgical candidates
Prevention and Complication
  • Prevention
    • medical management may delay worsening of disease
    • adequate control of HTN and HR
  • Complications
    • aortic dissection can result in sudden death when not identified or treated properly

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