Acute Aortic Dissection
OVERVIEW
- the most common catastrophe of the aorta (3:100,000); 3 times more common than abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) rupture
- aortic dissection is a type of acute aortic syndrome (AAS) characterized by blood entering the medial layer of the wall with the creation of a false lumen.
- AAS is a spectrum of life-threatening thoracic aortic pathologies including intramural haematoma, penetrating atherosclerotic ulcer, and aortic dissection.
CLASSIFICATION
- Stanford (most commonly used)
- Type A — Involves ascending aorta. Can extend distally ad infinitum. Surgery usually indicated.
- Type B — Involves aorta beyond left subclavian artery only. Often managed medically with BP control.
- DeBakey
A car mechanic said argumentatively to his client, a cardiac surgeon: “So Doc, look at this work. I also take valves out, grind ’em, put in new parts, and when I finish this baby will purr like a kitten. So how come you get the big bucks, when you and me are doing basically the same work?”
The surgeon replied: “Try doing your work with the engine running.” Michael DeBakey (1908–2008)
PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
- There are 3 possibilities as to how the blood enters the media:
- Atherosclerotic ulcer leading to intimal tear
- Disruption of vasa vasorum causing intramural haematoma
- De novo intimal tear
HISTORY
- Chest pain is classically ripping or tearing in nature, that occurs suddenly and is maximal at onset – however, chest pain is not always present!
- retrosternal chest pain – anterior dissection
- interscapular pain – descending aorta
- severe pain (‘worst ever-pain’) (90%)
- sudden onset (90%)
- sharp (64%) or tearing (50%)
- migrating pain (16%)
- down the back (46%)
- maximal at onset (not crescendo build up, as in an AMI)
- Other features
- end-organ symptoms: neurological, syncope, seizure, limb paraesthesias, pain or weakness, flank pain, SOB + haemoptysis
- aortic regurgitation
- hypertension
- most have ischaemic heart disease
- Atypical presentations are common
- consider the diagnosis of acute aortic dissection if there is a combination of chest/ back pain and new or evolving neurological deficit(s)
RISK FACTORS
- Inherited disease (especially younger patients < 40 yrs)
- Marfan’s syndrome (fibrillin gene mutations)
- Ehlers-Danlos syndrome type IV (collagen defects)
- Turner syndrome
- annulo- aortic ectasia
- familial aortic dissection
- Aortic wall stress
- Hypertension (72% (and other CV risk factors: smoker, lipids))
- previous cardiovascular surgery
- structural abnormalities (e.g. bicuspid or unicommisural aortic valve, aortic coarctation)
- iatrogenic (e.g. recent cardiac catheterisation)
- infection (syphilis)
- arteritis such as Takayasu’s or giant cell
- aortic dilatation / aneurysm
- ‘crack’ cocaine (abrupt catecholamine-induced hypertension)
- Reduced resistance aortic wall: Increasing age
EXAMINATION
- aortic regurgitation is common
- hypertension (if hypotensive ensure it is not due to limb discrepancy caused by an occluded vessel – check BP in the arm with best radial pulse)
- shock – ominous signs: tamponade, hypovolaemia, vagal tone
- heart failure
- neurological deficits: limb weakness, paraesthesiae, Horners syndrome
- SVC syndrome – compression of SVC by aorta
- asymmetrical pulses (carotid, brachial, femoral)
- haemothorax
COMPLICATIONS
- Suspect if hypotensive (check for limb discrepancy!)
- aortic rupture/regurgitation
- acute myocardial infarction
- cardiac tamponade
- end-organ ischaemia (brain, limbs, spine, renal, gut, liver)
- death
INVESTIGATIONS
- ECG
- Normal. inferior ST elevation (right coronary dissection) but can be any STEMI (0.1% of STEMIs are dissections)
- pericarditis changes, electrical alternans (tamponade)
- Laboratory
- Cr elevation with renal artery involvement
- tropnonin elevated if dissection causes myocardial ischaemia
- D-dimer – if negative dissection is very unlikely, but not sufficient to rule out