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Abdominal Aortic & Thoracic Aneurysms Andris Kazmers, MD, MSPH, FACS Integrative Cardiovascular Health and Wellness 3250 Woods Way, Suite 9 Petoskey, Michigan 231-881-9700

Abdominal Aortic and Thoracic Aneurysms

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Page 1: Abdominal Aortic and Thoracic Aneurysms

Abdominal Aortic & Thoracic Aneurysms

Andris Kazmers, MD, MSPH, FACSIntegrative Cardiovascular Health and Wellness

3250 Woods Way, Suite 9Petoskey, Michigan

231-881-9700

Page 2: Abdominal Aortic and Thoracic Aneurysms

Aneurysms & Aortic Disease

• Abnormal dilation of vessel 1.5 – 2 X native size• True vs false• Mycotic• Dissecting• Saccular vs fusiform

Additional aortic abnormalities

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Journal of Vascular Surgery 2008 47, 504-512DOI: (10.1016/j.jvs.2007.10.043)

Location Male Female

Ascending 4.0 3.4

Descending 3.2 2.8

Supraceliac 3.0 2.7

Suprarenal 2.8 2.7

Infrarenal 2.4 2.2

Aortic Bifurcation

2.3 2.0

Normal Aortic Size (cm)

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Normal Aortic Size

Journal of Vascular Surgery 2008 47, 504-512DOI: (10.1016/j.jvs.2007.10.043)

Page 5: Abdominal Aortic and Thoracic Aneurysms

AAA

• Most common aortic aneurysm– AAAs 21/100,000 person-years– TAAs 6/100,000 person-years

• Increasing incidence & prevalence? 13-15th leading cause of death in US Increasing number of total & ruptured AAA True worldwide, in US recent decline Women constitute higher proportion rAAA

• Asx unless expand, rupture or embolize

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AAA Diagnosis: Physical Exam

Best Case• Sensitivity 68%• Specificity 75%

Sensitivity• Girth > 100 cm 53%• Girth < 100 cm 91%

Tends to overestimate AAA size

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AAA Diagnosis

• Physical exam 38%

• Incidental 62%

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Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm

AAA In USA

40,000 repairs annually

> 2,000,000 with undiagnosed AAA

Estimated 9,000 deaths from rupture

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Incidence AAA

• 1.5% in unselected autopsies• 3.2% in unselected ultrasound studies• 5% in CAD patients screened by USN• 10% in PVOD patients screened by USN• 12 - 20% in those with family history• > 50% with femoral or popliteal aneurysms

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Screening

• One time ultrasound screening recommended in men 65 – 75 years of age who have ever smoked

• No screening recommended in women

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AAA Rupture Declining Before Screening

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Diagnosis AAA: Imaging

• Abdominal x-ray• Ultrasound• CT• MRI• Angiography

Page 13: Abdominal Aortic and Thoracic Aneurysms

Diagnosis AAA: Imaging

• Abdominal x-ray• Ultrasound• CT• MRI• Angiography

Page 14: Abdominal Aortic and Thoracic Aneurysms

Diagnosis AAA: Imaging

• Abdominal x-ray• Ultrasound• CT• MRI• Angiography

Page 15: Abdominal Aortic and Thoracic Aneurysms

Diagnosis AAA: Imaging

• Abdominal x-ray• Ultrasound• CT• MRI• Angiography

Page 16: Abdominal Aortic and Thoracic Aneurysms

Diagnosis AAA: Imaging

• Abdominal x-ray• Ultrasound• CT• MRI• Angiography

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AAA

• Once diagnosis made, most likely cause of death defined for that individual

• Usually asymptomatic• Expand & rupture unless patient first dies from

another cause

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Surveillance AAA

• USN or CT: ? every 3, 4, 6, 12 or more months

• AAA repair in men• Symptoms • Expand to 5.5 cm or more • Growth > 1 cm in one year

• Repair in women ? size

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AAA: Presentation

Abdominal or back pain with AAAIf:• No syncope• Stable vital signs• Chronic vs acute pain • Stable hematocrit,then proceed with CT scan

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AAA & Back Pain

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CT Not Arteriography for AAA Evaluation :Angio Done During EVAR

Defined By Preop CT

• Renal or visceral artery involvement• Accessory renal artery• Renal artery stenosis• Horseshoe kidney• Peripheral aneurysms (15%)• Status of pelvic circulation• Evaluation of associated PVOD• Assess candidacy for endovascular repair

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Ruptured AAA: Presentation

• Painback or abdominalmay be in unusual location

• Pulsatile abdominal mass

• Shock

Page 23: Abdominal Aortic and Thoracic Aneurysms

Ruptured AAA: Presentation

Abdominal or back pain and syncope

Proceed to OR!( or to Endovascular Suite?)

Page 24: Abdominal Aortic and Thoracic Aneurysms

Inflammatory AAA

• 5 - 10% AAA• Thick wall on CT, USN suggestive• Abdominal or back pain• Elevated ESR• Duodenal, ureteral adhesion• Technically challenging• Greater mortality, morbidity

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AAA: Other Modes of Presentation

• Atheroembolism

• Aortocaval fistula

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AAA: Infrequent Modes of Presentation

• Aortoenteric fistula

• Duodenal obstruction

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AAA Rupture

Risk factors for AAA rupture

Initial AAA size Diastolic hypertensionChronic obstructive pulmonary disease

Cronenwett et. al. Surgery 98:472 1985.

Page 28: Abdominal Aortic and Thoracic Aneurysms

AAA: Natural History

• Growth rate 0.4 - 0.5 cm per year 4.5 – 4.9 cm AAA grew 0.7cm in 1 yr* Can rupture “without growth”

• Rupture at 3 years in unrepaired AAA > 5 cm 28%*

• Rupture at 3 years in those unfit for repair 5 – 5.9 cm 28%*** > 6 cm 41%

*Brown, et. al. J Vasc Surg 23:213, 1996**Glimaker, et.al. Eur J Vasc Surg 5:125, 1991***Jones, et. al. Br J Surg 85:1382, 1998

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Small AAA Rupture

• Autopsy study of those dying with rAAA*9.5% had AAA < 4 cm33% had AAA < 5 cm

• Clinical study of r AAA10% rAAA < 5cm**

*Darling, et. al. Circulation 56(Suppl 2):161, 1977**Nicholls, et. al. J Vasc Surg 28:884, 1998

Page 30: Abdominal Aortic and Thoracic Aneurysms

Surgical Treatment AAA

• First successful direct repair: 1951, Dubost

• Surgical treatment doubled life expectancy in the 60s, despite high elective mortality rate

• Mortality elective repair decreasing 15% < 5%

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Endovascular Treatment AAA

• First endovascular AAA repair (EVAR): 1991, Parodi

• EVAR operative mortality lower than open repair

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Endovascular AAA Repair:Gore Excluder

• Bifurcated, modular • Nitinol with PTFE• Proximal “fishscales”• No distal hooks• 16-20 Fr ipsilateral• 12-18 Fr contralateral

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Endovascular AAA Repair: Gore Excluder

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EVAR Complications

• Systemic– MI, CHF, arrhythmias, respiratory or renal insufficiency

• Procedure related– Femoral arterial injury: hemorrhage or occlusion– Groin wound infection – Iliac or aortic injury– Misplacement with vessel occlusion– Thromboembolizaton– Ischemic colitis

• Device related late complications– Migration, detachment, rupture, stenosis– Endoleak

Page 35: Abdominal Aortic and Thoracic Aneurysms

Endoleaks

More common in older grafts

• Type I leak (a: proximal, b: distal)– Persistent flow in aneurysm sac– Incomplete exclusion

• Type II– Sac filled from branches

• Type III– Component disruption

• Type IV– Endograft porosity

• Type V – Endotension: sac enlargement with

no obvious leak

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Endovascular AAA Repair

Endovascular repair not possible in everyone Highly complex repairs limited to referral centers Many devices recalled, removed from market Cost >> reimbursement Need for lifelong follow-up: more late interventions Early results better after EVAR Late results, durability: comparable to open repair

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AAA Repair

• OpenAnatomically unsuitable for EVARMany, not all, ruptured AAA

• EVARLower morbidity, mortality with elective or rAAAEquivalent survival up to 4 years postop Increased need for secondary procedures

Page 38: Abdominal Aortic and Thoracic Aneurysms

Controversies

• Wait until AAA 5.5 cm in male?– Bad idea in my opinion!

• What size AAA to fix in female?: 5cm – Higher rupture rate than men at same size

• Open vs endovascular– EVAR when possible

Page 39: Abdominal Aortic and Thoracic Aneurysms

Thoracic Aortic Aneurysms

Ascending Aorta Descending Aorta

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Thoracoabdominal Aortic Aneurysms

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Iliac Artery Aneurysms

• Usually associated with AAA

• Natural history poorly defined, but dangerous

• Repair those > 3 cm – Common and external: endograft– Internal: exclude, embolize– Iliac branch graft

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Endovascular Management:Wallgraft for Common Iliac Artery Aneurysm

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Internal Iliac Artery Aneurysm Exclusion

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Endovascular Management Suprarenal Aneurysms

Snorkel

Fenestrated Grafts

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Open TAA Repair

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Aortic Debranching: TAA

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Descending Aortic Dissection

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•Type A dissections

•Type B dissections

AcuteComplicated / symptomatic

Uncomplicated /asymptomatic

Chronic

Aortic Dissection

Page 51: Abdominal Aortic and Thoracic Aneurysms

Dissection Trials and Registry

– Best medical therapy vs BMT + endograft

– No difference in initial survival, aortic related deaths or progression of disease in early studies

– Improvement in aortic remodeling

– Improvement in late survival in those with endografting

Page 52: Abdominal Aortic and Thoracic Aneurysms

Acute Complicated Descending Dissection

Indications for Surgical or Endovascular Treatment• Rupture

• Malperfusion

• Pain/impending rupture

•Results – low mortality, low stroke, low paraplegia rates Retrograde dissection → Type A – 2%

Reinterventions – 26%

Page 53: Abdominal Aortic and Thoracic Aneurysms

Summary

• EVAR safer approach with expanding indications• Advances have been fast and furious• TEVAR successful for thoracic aneurysms and dissections• Fenestrated and custom grafts available