1 / 11

Aortic dissection

Aortic dissection. Peter Cheng. irad. 12 referral centres 646 patients 1996 -1998. Aortic dissection. Wide clinical spectrum Chest pain most common 72.7% Tearing/ripping were not characteristic descriptors Abrupt onset 84.8% and severe 90.6% Migrating 16.6%

phil
Download Presentation

Aortic dissection

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Aortic dissection Peter Cheng

  2. irad • 12 referral centres • 646 patients • 1996 -1998

  3. Aortic dissection • Wide clinical spectrum • Chest pain most common 72.7% • Tearing/ripping were not characteristic descriptors • Abrupt onset 84.8% and severe 90.6% • Migrating 16.6% • Abdo pain 29% Back pain 53% • Syncope 9.4% • No other neuro deficits • Hypertension 70% Type B, 35.7% Type A • Hypotension = tamponade UPO • Aortic regurg murmur in half • ECG normal in 31%

  4. CXR • CXR findings • Mediastinalwidening • Left paraspinalstripe • Displacement of intimal calcifications (calcium sign) • Apical pleural cap • Left pleural effusion • Displacement of endotracheal tube or nasogastric tube • 63% sensitive for widened mediastinum • Completely normal in 12.4%

  5. US • Limited role as a bedside test except to rule out pericardial tamponade • Aortic regurg (doppler) • Intimal flap may be seen using parasternal and suprasternal view • Transoesophageal (TOE) very sensitive but less accessible than CT

  6. treatment • Overall mortality 27.4% • Type A • Surgery reduces mortality from 58% to 26% • Type B • Surgery worsens prognosis from 10 – 31%!! • Majority successfully managed medically • BP control • Reduced wall stress • Beta-blocker egesmolol aiming for 60bpm / systolic 120mmHg +/- IV antiHT • Fentanyl 25-50mcg • Urgent transfer to CTS

  7. AD VS AMI • Due to dissection of R or L coronary arteries • Needs robust discussion with Cardiologist • Poor eGFR must not hinder emergent CT aortogram • Hypotension • Tamponade • Myocardial ischaemia • Aortic insufficiency • Withhold thrombolytics/heparin

  8. Always … • Palpate bilateral radial pulses • Measure bilateral BPs

  9. http://emcrit.org/podcasts/aortic-dissection/

More Related