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Vasospastic (Prinzmetal) Angina

Cardiology > Aortic Dissection 

Aortic Dissection 

Background

Aortic dissection is a life-threatening condition characterized by a tear in the intimal layer of the aorta, allowing blood to enter the media and create a false lumen. This can obstruct blood flow to branch vessels or cause rupture, leading to ischemia of organs, cardiac tamponade, or death if not promptly recognized and treated. 

 

II) Classification/Types

By Stanford Classification (based on involvement of ascending aorta): 

    • Type A: Involves ascending aorta (± descending aorta). Surgical emergency. 
    • Type B: Involves descending aorta only (distal to left subclavian artery). Often managed medically unless complications arise. 

By DeBakey Classification: 

    • Type I: Ascending and descending aorta (originates in ascending) 
    • Type II: Ascending aorta only 
    • Type III: Descending aorta only (originates distal to left subclavian) 

By Onset: 

    • Acute: <14 days from symptom onset (higher mortality) 
    • Chronic: ≥14 days duration 

 

III) Pathophysiology 

Aortic dissection begins with an intimal tear due to underlying medial degeneration (e.g., cystic medial necrosis). High intraluminal pressure drives blood into the medial layer, forming a false lumen. Propagation can compress branch vessels, causing ischemia (stroke, MI, mesenteric ischemia), or rupture into the pericardium (tamponade), pleural cavity, or retroperitoneum. 

 

IV) Epidemiology

    • Sex: More common in men (2:1 ratio) 
    • Age: Peak incidence between 60–80 years; earlier onset in Marfan syndrome or congenital conditions 
    • Geography: Global incidence of 3–6 cases per 100,000 person-years 
    • Comorbidities: Strongly associated with hypertension, connective tissue disease, and aortic aneurysm 


Etiology

I) Causes

    • Chronic hypertension (most common) 
    • Connective tissue disorders (Marfan syndrome, Ehlers-Danlos) 
    • Bicuspid aortic valve 
    • Aortic aneurysm 
    • Aortic trauma (e.g., deceleration injury) 
    • Aortitis (e.g., syphilitic, Takayasu) 
    • Cardiac surgery or catheter-based procedures 
    • Cocaine or stimulant use 

 

II) Risk Factors

    • Age >60 
    • Male sex 
    • Hypertension 
    • Smoking 
    • Marfan or Ehlers-Danlos syndrome 
    • Prior cardiac/aortic surgery 
    • Family history of aortic disease 
    • Pregnancy (rare, typically third trimester or postpartum) 


Clinical Presentation

I) History (Symptoms)

    • Sudden, severe, tearing or ripping chest or back pain (most classic) 
    • Migratory pain as dissection propagates 
    • Syncope or collapse 
    • Dyspnea (if tamponade or aortic regurgitation) 
    • Neurologic symptoms (stroke, spinal cord ischemia) 
    • Abdominal or limb pain (mesenteric or limb ischemia) 

 

II) Physical Exam (Signs)

Vital Signs: 

    • Hypertension or hypotension (suggests rupture or tamponade) 
    • Pulse deficits or asymmetric BP (>20 mmHg difference between arms) 
    • Tachycardia 

Cardiac Exam: 

    • New diastolic murmur of aortic regurgitation 
    • Muffled heart sounds (cardiac tamponade) 

Pulmonary: 

    • Decreased breath sounds (hemothorax) 

Neurologic: 

    • Focal deficits, paraplegia, or altered mental status 

Peripheral Vascular: 

    • Absent pulses or cold limbs (limb ischemia) 


Differential Diagnosis (DDx)

    • Acute myocardial infarction 
    • Pulmonary embolism 
    • Pericardial tamponade 
    • Aortic aneurysm rupture 
    • Esophageal rupture (Boerhaave syndrome) 
    • Acute pancreatitis 
    • Spinal cord infarction 


Diagnostic Tests

Initial Tests: 

    • Chest X-ray: Widened mediastinum, pleural effusion (left-sided) 
    • ECG: May show LVH (hypertension), ischemia, or be normal 

Definitive Imaging: 

    • CT Angiography (CTA): First-line; rapid, sensitive, defines extent of dissection 
    • Transesophageal Echo (TEE): Preferred in unstable patients; bedside use 
    • MRI Angiography: Gold standard; used when stable and CTA contraindicated 

Other Tests: 

    • D-dimer: Elevated, but nonspecific; negative value may help rule out 
    • Echocardiogram (TTE): May detect aortic root dilation or tamponade 


Treatment

I) Medical Management:

Initial Goals: 

    • Reduce shear stress: Lower BP and dP/dt 
    • Target: SBP 100–120 mmHg, HR <60 bpm 

Medications: 

    • IV beta-blockers (e.g., esmolol, labetalol): First-line 
    • Add vasodilators (e.g., nicardipine, nitroprusside): If BP remains elevated after beta-blockade 

Pain control: 

    • IV opioids (e.g., morphine) to reduce sympathetic tone 

 

II) Surgical/Interventional Management:

Type A Dissection: 

    • Emergent surgical repair (ascending aorta replacement ± valve repair) 
    • Delay = high mortality 

Type B Dissection: 

    • Medical management unless complications (e.g., rupture, end-organ ischemia, persistent pain, refractory hypertension) 
    • Endovascular repair (TEVAR) or surgical repair if complicated 


Patient Education, Screening, Vaccines

    • Emphasize emergency response for sudden chest/back pain 
    • Adherence to antihypertensive therapy is critical 
    • Family screening for connective tissue disorders or known aortopathy 
    • Avoid high-intensity physical exertion or heavy lifting 
    • Vaccinations: 
    • Influenza annually 
    • Pneumococcal 
    • COVID-19 vaccination


      Consults

    • Cardiothoracic Surgery: Type A dissection or complicated Type B 
    • Vascular Surgery: Type B dissection with complications 
    • Cardiology: For chronic dissection monitoring and BP control 
    • Genetics: If connective tissue disorder suspected 
    • Radiology: Serial imaging and endovascular planning 
    • Primary Care/Internal Medicine: Chronic hypertension and risk factor management 

 

  1. Follow-Up

    • Imaging: 
      • Repeat CTA/MRA at 3, 6, and 12 months, then annually 
    • BP Monitoring: 
      • Goal: SBP <120 mmHg, HR <60 bpm 
    • Medication Adherence: 
      • Lifelong beta-blockers and antihypertensives 
    • Lifestyle Counseling: 
      • Smoking cessation 
      • Avoid heavy lifting and isometric exercises 
    • Surveillance for Aneurysm Expansion in chronic dissection 

 

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