Vascular: Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm (AAA)
Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm (AAA)
Basics
- Aneurysm Definition: 1.5x Dilation of Normal Vessel Diameter- Normal Diameter: 2-3 cm
 
- Most Common Cause: Atherosclerosis with Degeneration of Media
- Most Common Site: Infrarenal (80%)
- Rupture Has a 40-50% Mortality- Most Common Site: 2-4 cm Inferior to Renals; Left Posterolateral Wall
 
Risk Factors
- Disease Risk Factors:- Smoking (Strongest Risk Factor)
- Male
- Elderly
- Hypertension
- White
- Spinal Cord Injury
 
- Rupture Risk Factors:- Hypertension
- COPD
- Overall Size
- Rapid Increase in Size
- Female Sex
 
Presentation
- Mostly Asymptomatic & Found Incidentally
- Rupture Triad:- Acute Abdominal or Back Pain
- Hypotension
- Pulsatile Abdominal Mass
 
Diagnosis
- Screening: Duplex US- One-Time US Indications:- Age 65 with Tobacco History (Smoked ≥ 100 Cigarettes)
- Age 65 with First-Degree Relatives with AAA’s
 
- Surveillance Frequency (SVS Guidelines):- ≥ 3.0 cm: Every 3 Years
- ≥ 4.0 cm: Every 12 Months
- ≥ 5.0 cm: Every 6 Months
 
- US is Good for AAA But Poor at Identifying Rupture
 
- One-Time US Indications:
- Surgery Planning: CTA
- Ruptured:- Stable, Transient Responder or Insufficient Evidence: CTA
- Unstable & Sufficient Clinical Evidence: Proceed Directly to Surgery
 
Repair Indications
- Symptomatic
- Large- Males ≥ 5.5 cm- ≥ 5.0 cm if High Rupture Risk (COPD, Poorly Controlled HTN)
 
- Females ≥ 5.0 cm
 
- Males ≥ 5.5 cm
- Growth > 1 cm Per Year
- Peripheral Ischemia from Embolization of Mural Thrombosis
- Mycotic Aneurysm
Repair
- Stable: Elective Open Repair or Endovascular Aneurysm Repair (EVAR)- EVAR Often Preferred (Especially if High Risk, Elderly or Multiple Comorbidities)
- EVAR Requirements/Contraindications:
- Comparison:- Similar Mortality if Ruptured
- Short-Term (30-Day) Mortality:- EVAR – 2-4% (Better)
- Open – 5-7%
 
- Similar Long-Term Mortality
 
 
- Unstable: Emergent Open Repair or Endovascular Aneurysm Repair (EVAR)- Allow Permissive Hypotension: SBP 50-100
 

AAA 1

AAA by Duplex US 2

AAA by CTA 3
Other Aortic Aneurysms
Inflammatory Aneurysm
- Aneurysmal Dilation Due to Significant Inflammation- Thick Aortic Wall with Adjacent Retroperitoneal Fibrosis
- Dense Adherence to Adjacent Structures
 
- Etiology Not Entirely Understood
- Specific Issues:- Adhesions to Duodenum & Small Bowel
- Ureter Entrapment
 
- Tx: Stent Grafting (Inflammation Resolves with Graft)
Mycotic Aneurysm
- Infected Aneurysm
- Most Common Organisms: Staphylococcus #1, Salmonella #2, Escherichia coli & Streptococcus- Most Common Non-Aneurysmal Infection: Salmonella
 
- More Often Saccular than Fusiform
- High Risk of Rupture
- CT Findings:- Periaortic Soft Tissue Mass
- Fluid Stranding
- Destruction of Surrounding Tissues
 
- Tx: ABX & Surgical Repair (Reconstruction or Extra-Anatomic Bypass)
References
- Blaus B. Wikimedia Commons. (License: CC BY-SA-4.0)
- Spangler R, Van Pham T, Khoujah D, Martinez JP. Abdominal emergencies in the geriatric patient. Int J Emerg Med. 2014 Oct 21;7:43.(License: CC BY-4.0)
- Jiber H, Hajji R, Zrihni Y, Zaghloul R, Zizi O, Bouarhroum A. Isolated infrarenal abdominal aorta aneurysm in a 42-year-old patient with Marfan’s syndrome: Case report. SAGE Open Med Case Rep. 2013 Oct 1;1:2050313X13507564. (License: CC BY-NC-3.0)