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Page 1: BCC4: Plunkett on Thoracic Aortic Dissection

Brian PlunkettAdvanced Trainee in Cardiothoracic Surgery

Dept Cardiothoracic Surgery, RNSH

Aortic Dissection

Bedside Critical Care, Cairns, 2013

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Pathogenesis

Entry tears: Asc Ao 60%, Arch 10%, Descending 30%

Intimal tear, propagates in medial layer antegrade (90%)

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Pathogenesis: Risk Factors

A: age, atherosclerosis, aneurysm B: bicuspid aortic valve (fibrillin def.)

blood pressure (hypertension)

C: connective tissue disorder Marfan’s, Ehlers-Danlos, Lewy Deitz

D: degenerative cystic medial degeneration

E: trauma, iatrogenic, surgery, pregnancy

2-3 / 100,000 age 60-70 M:F >2:1

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Pathogenesis

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Pathogenesis

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Pathogenesis

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Pathogenesis: Acute Aortic Syndrome

Penetrating atherosclerotic ulcer & acute intramural haematoma

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Classification

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Presentation Pain – ‘ripping’, ‘tearing’

- may radiate to back Symptoms of organ malperfusion

- MI, stroke, mesenteric ischaemia Dyspnoea

-AR, tamponade, haemothorax Hypo or hypertension, BP differential AR murmur Absent distal pulses

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Diagnosis

60% 95%

98%99%

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Management - MedicalMedical & drug history, clinical exam: document neurology and pulses

Normalise the blood pressure (care with AR)Defer intubation until theatre if possible

Opioids, invasive monitoringPray they haven’t given aspirin, clopidogrel, clexane

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Type A Essentially all patients considered (age, met’s) Resect primary tear, stabilize aortic wall End organ protection, correct malperfusion Prevent life threatening rupture, tamponade, AR,

coronary dissection

Type B Reserved for ‘complicated’ cases

Rupture or impending rupture (pain, eff.) Threatened or evident malperfusion Sometimes controversial

Surgery

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Surgery

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Surgery

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Approaches to the Ascending Aorta

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Cerebral perfusion strategies

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Approaches to the Aortic Root

Bentall’s

David & Yacoub

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De-branching and replacing ascending aorta

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De-branching and stenting the arch

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Stenting Type B dissections

10% 30 day medical mortality, 25% with surgery, paraplegia 15%+

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Key points

Goals

• early diagnosis, initiate therapy before confirmation

• atypical NSTEMI – think AoD before anticoagulation

• early path to definitive therapy

• the right operation for the right patient

Pitfalls

• misdiagnosis: MI, stroke, ischaemic limb embolism

• delayed care

• failure to control, or adequately control HR & BP

- includes postoperatively!

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