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Potentially life-threatening condition in which disruption or aortic intima allows dissection of blood into vessel wall; may involve ascending aorta (type II), descending aorta (type III), or both (type I) (Fig. 127-1. Classification of Aortic Dissections). More commonly used classification: Type A-dissection involves ascending aorta; type B-limited to transverse and/or descending aorta. Involvement of the ascending aorta is most lethal form. Variant acute aortic syndromes include intramural hematoma without an intimal flap, and penetrating atherosclerotic ulcer.

Etiology !!navigator!!

Conditions that predispose to medial degeneration or aortic wall stress, including hypertension, Marfan's, Loeys-Dietz and Ehlers-Danlos syndromes. Risk is increased in pts with coarctation of aorta, bicuspid aortic valve, inflammatory aortitis (Takayasu's arteritis, giant cell arteritis), and rarely in third trimester of pregnancy in otherwise normal women.

Symptoms !!navigator!!

Sudden onset of severe anterior or posterior chest pain, with “ripping” quality; maximal pain may travel if dissection propagates. Additional symptoms relate to obstruction of aortic branches (stroke, MI), dyspnea (acute aortic regurgitation), or symptoms of low cardiac output due to cardiac tamponade (dissection into pericardial sac).

Physical Examination !!navigator!!

Sinus tachycardia common; if cardiac tamponade develops, hypotension, pulsus paradoxus, and pericardial rub appear. Asymmetry of carotid or brachial pulses, aortic regurgitation, and neurologic abnormalities associated with interruption of carotid artery flow are possible findings.

Laboratory !!navigator!!

CXR: Widening of mediastinum; dissection can be confirmed by CT, transesophageal echocardiography, or MRI. Aortography is rarely required, as sensitivity of these noninvasive techniques is >90%.

TREATMENT

Aortic Dissection

Reduce cardiac contractility and treat hypertension to maintain systolic bp between 100 and 120 mmHg using IV agents (Table 127-1 Treatment of Aortic Dissection), e.g., sodium nitroprusside accompanied by a beta blocker (e.g., IV metoprolol, labetolol, or esmolol, for target heart rate 60 beats/min), followed by oral therapy. If beta blocker contraindicated, consider IV verapamil or diltiazem (see Table 127-1 Treatment of Aortic Dissection). Avoid direct vasodilators (e.g., hydralazine) because they may increase shear stress. Ascending aortic dissection (type A) requires surgical repair emergently or, if pt can be stabilized with medications, semielectively. Descending aortic dissections are stabilized medically (maintain systolic bp between 110 and 120 mmHg) with oral antihypertensive agents (esp. beta blockers); surgical (or endovascular) repair is not usually indicated unless continued pain or extension of dissection is observed (by serial MRI or CT performed every 6-12 months).

Outline

Section 8. Cardiology