Aortic dissection natural history, complications and prognosis

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Aortic dissection Microchapters

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Differentiating Aortic dissection from other Diseases

Epidemiology and Demographics

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Natural History, Complications and Prognosis

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Management during Pregnancy

Case Studies

Case #1


Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editor-In-Chief: Cafer Zorkun, M.D., Ph.D. [2]

Overview

Aortic dissection carries a very poor prognosis. 90% of patients who are untreated will be dead at one year. Type A dissection is associated with a worse prognosis than type B dissection. Aortic dissection can be complicated by extension to the coronary arteries resulting in myocardial infarction, involvement of the aortic arch to cause stroke, dilation of the route to cause aortic insufficiency, extension into the pericardium to cause pericardial tamponade, and heart failure, and aortic rupture.

Natural History

If the patient remains untreated, the mortality is:

  • 1% per hour during the first day
  • 75% at 2 weeks
  • 90% at 1 year

Complications

The complications of aortic dissection include:

Cardiac

Aortic rupture

leading to massive blood loss, hypotension and shock often resulting in death. Indeed, aortic dissection accounts  for 3-4% of sudden deaths.
  • Pericardial tamponade due to extension of the dissection into the pericardium
  • Acute aortic regurgitationdue to the aortic dilation and dissection into the valve structure which can then cause acute pulmonary edema. Aortic insufficiency (AI) occurs in 1/2 to 2/3 of ascending aortic dissections, and the murmur of aortic insufficiency is audible in about 32% of proximal dissections. The intensity (loudness) of the murmur is dependent on the blood pressure and may be inaudible in the event of hypotension. There are multiple etiologies for AI in the setting of ascending aortic dissection. The dissection may dilate the annulus of the aortic valve, so that the leaflets of the valve cannot coapt. Another mechanism is that the dissection may extend into the aortic root and detach the aortic valve leaflets. The third mechanism is that if there was an extensive intimal tear, the intimal flap may prolapse into the LV outflow tract, causing intimal intussusception into the aortic valve preventing proper valve closure.
  • Myocardial ischemia or myocardial infarction due to dissection into either the right or left coronary ostium (but most commonly the right coronary artery). Myocardial infarction (heart attack) occurs in 1-2% of aortic dissections. The etiology of the infarction is involvement of the coronary arteries (the arteries that supply the heart) in the dissection. The right coronary artery is involved more commonly than the left coronary artery. If the myocardial infarction is treated with thrombolytic therapy, the mortality increases to over 70%, mostly due to hemorrhage into the pericardial sac causing pericardial tamponade. Because aortic dissection may present to the emergency room physician similar to a myocardial infarction, the physician must be careful to make the proper diagnosis prior to initiating treatment for myocardial infarction, since the treatment regimen for myocardial infarction can be lethal to an individual presenting with aortic dissection.
  • Redissection and aortic diameter enlargement
  • Aneurysmal dilatation and saccular aneurysm chronically

Kidney

Peripheral Arterial

  • Claudication due to an extension of the dissection into the iliac arteries

Neurologic

Compression of Nearby Organs

Prognosis

The mortality rate is in large part determined by the patient's age and comorbidities.

  • 30% in hospital mortality
  • 60% 10-year survival rate among treated patients

Type A aortic dissection

  • Surgical treatment-30% mortality rate
  • Medical treatment-60% mortality rate

Type B aortic dissection

  • Surgical treatment-10% mortality rate
  • Medical treatment- 30% mortality rate

References

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