Aortic dissection

Classification

 

  1. Stanford
    • Type A: ascending aorta only
    • Type B: descending aorta with or without ascending aorta
  2. BeBakey
    • Type I: ascending aorta + descending
    • Type II: confined to ascending aorta
    • Type III: confined to descening aorta, beyond origin of subclavian artery

Pathology

  • Myxoid degeneration - loss of elastic fibres and replacement of musculo-elastic tissue with proteoglycan-rich matrix
  • Cystic medial necrosis: may be associated with injury or occlusion of vasa vasorum
  • Intimal tear - dissection propagates along plane that runs between inner 2/3 and outer 1/3 of media

Predisposing factors

  1. Hypertension - leads to increased shearing forces across intima
  2. Traumatic injury to aorta
  3. Iatrogenic - cardiac catheterisation, aortic cannulation, AV replacement
  4. Pregnancy
  5. Inherited defects
    • Marfan's - 15q fibrillin defect
    • Ehlers-Danlos - procollagen formation
    • Pseudoxanthoma elasticum - fragmentation of elastic fibres in media

 

Effects of dissection

  1. Propagation
    • Aortic ring - acute aortic regurgitation
    • Coronary arteries - Angina / MI
    • Carotid arteries - stroke
    • Abdominal aorta - gut ischaemia (if mesenteric vessels involved)
    • Renal artery - ARF
    • Intercostal / lumbar vessels - spinal cord ischaemia (loss of supply from arteria radicularis magna - great spinal artery of Adamkewicz)
  2. Rupture
    • Pericardium - tamponade
    • Pleura - haemothorax
  3. Compression
    • Trachea / oesophagus / SVC
  4. Double-barrelled lumen (if re-enters lumen through another intimal tear)

Clinical features

  • Shock
  • New Murmur
  • Tamponade
  • Asymmetrical pulses
  • Neurological signs - stroke, cord features

Investigations

  • ECG: MI / exclude cardiac differentials
  • CXR: 80% widened mediastinum
  • Angiography: Gold standard - visualisation of ventricular valve function, permits assessment of coronary anatomy
  • CT/MRI: 85-90% sensitivity + specificity
  • TOE: >95%; can be used at bedside

Management

  1. Resuscitate: fluids, maintain cardiac index (CO/BSA) and renal function
  2. Bloods
  3. Central line: monitor filling pressures
  4. Pharmacological
    • Labetalol - control ejection fraction and arterial pressure
    • Sodium nitroprusside (can cause reflex tachycardia)
  5. Transfer to cardiothoracic unit
    • Type A: Replacement of diseased segment of aorta with interpositional graft and re-implantation of coronary arteries if root involved +/- valve replacement
    • Type B: Conservative managment (surgery confers no additional benefit)