Abdominal aortic aneurysm: Difference between revisions
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==Background== | ==Background== | ||
*Focal dilation of the abdominal aorta to >50% of normal diameter (typically >3 cm) | |||
*Most commonly infrarenal (95%) | |||
*'''Ruptured AAA is a surgical emergency''' with overall mortality of '''65-85%''' (including prehospital deaths) | |||
*For those who reach OR, mortality is still 40-50% | |||
*Risk factors: | |||
**Age > 65 years, male sex (6:1 ratio), smoking (strongest modifiable risk) | |||
**[[Hypertension]], family history, [[COPD]], peripheral vascular disease | |||
**Connective tissue disorders (Marfan, Ehlers-Danlos) | |||
*Risk of rupture increases with size: | |||
**<5 cm: ~1%/year | |||
**5-6 cm: ~10%/year | |||
**>7 cm: ~30%/year | |||
==Clinical Features== | |||
* | ===Classic Triad of Ruptured AAA=== | ||
* | *Abdominal/back pain + hypotension + pulsatile abdominal mass | ||
*Present in only ~50% of cases | |||
===Presentations=== | |||
* | *Intact (unruptured) AAA: usually asymptomatic or incidental finding | ||
* | *Symptomatic unruptured: abdominal/back/flank pain (expanding aneurysm) | ||
* | *Ruptured AAA: | ||
* | **Sudden, severe abdominal or back pain (may radiate to groin, flank, or thigh) | ||
* | **Hypotension / hemorrhagic [[shock]] | ||
* | **Pulsatile abdominal mass (difficult to palpate in obese or hypotensive patients) | ||
* | **May present as syncope or [[cardiac arrest]] | ||
*Contained rupture: retroperitoneal hemorrhage may be temporarily tamponaded | |||
**Transient hemodynamic stability — '''do not be falsely reassured''' | |||
*Mimics many conditions: [[renal colic]], [[diverticulitis]], [[MI]], musculoskeletal back pain | |||
==Diagnosis== | ==Differential Diagnosis== | ||
{{Abdominal Pain DDX Diffuse}} | |||
* | ==Evaluation== | ||
* | ===Bedside Ultrasound (First-Line in ED)=== | ||
* | *POCUS is the single most important test for unstable patients | ||
*'''Sensitivity ~100%''' for detecting aneurysm >3 cm<ref>Tayal VS, et al. Emergency department sonographic measurement of aortic diameter. ''J Ultrasound Med''. 2003;22(12):1291-1294. PMID 14680900</ref> | |||
*Measure outer wall to outer wall in transverse view | |||
*Cannot reliably detect rupture (free fluid may suggest it but absence does not exclude) | |||
*US identifies the aneurysm; CT identifies the rupture | |||
===CT Angiography=== | |||
*Gold standard for defining anatomy and surgical planning | |||
*Identifies rupture, contained leak, extent, relation to renal arteries | |||
*ONLY for hemodynamically STABLE patients | |||
*Sensitivity for rupture approaches 100% | |||
== | ===Labs=== | ||
*Type and crossmatch (at least 6 units PRBCs) | |||
*CBC, BMP, coagulation studies, lactate | |||
*'''Do NOT delay resuscitation or imaging for labs''' | |||
* | ==Management== | ||
===Ruptured AAA=== | |||
*Activate massive transfusion protocol | |||
*Permissive hypotension: target SBP 70-90 mmHg | |||
*Avoid aggressive crystalloid resuscitation; use blood products | |||
*Emergent vascular surgery consultation | |||
*'''Unstable patients go directly to OR''' (do NOT delay for CT) | |||
**EVAR if anatomy suitable and resources available | |||
**Open surgical repair if EVAR not feasible | |||
*If arrest: consider REBOA or ED thoracotomy with aortic cross-clamp | |||
===Symptomatic Unruptured AAA=== | |||
*Urgent vascular surgery consultation | |||
*Blood pressure control: target SBP 100-120 mmHg | |||
*Admit for expedited repair | |||
== | ===Incidental Asymptomatic AAA=== | ||
*<4 cm: surveillance US every 12 months | |||
*4-5.4 cm: surveillance US every 6 months; vascular referral | |||
*>=5.5 cm: refer for elective repair | |||
*USPSTF: one-time screening US for men 65-75 who have ever smoked | |||
==Disposition== | |||
*Ruptured: emergent OR / ICU | |||
*Symptomatic unruptured: monitored bed, urgent vascular consult | |||
*Asymptomatic incidental: outpatient vascular referral | |||
==See Also== | |||
*[[Aortic dissection]] | |||
*[[Abdominal pain]] | |||
*[[Shock]] | |||
*[[Ultrasound: Aorta]] | |||
- | ==References== | ||
<references/> | |||
*Chaikof EL, et al. SVS practice guidelines for AAA. ''J Vasc Surg''. 2018;67(1):2-77. PMID 29268916 | |||
*Kent KC. Abdominal aortic aneurysms. ''N Engl J Med''. 2014;371(22):2101-2108. PMID 25427112 | |||
[[Category:Vascular]] | |||
[[Category: | |||
Latest revision as of 20:56, 8 April 2026
Background
- Focal dilation of the abdominal aorta to >50% of normal diameter (typically >3 cm)
- Most commonly infrarenal (95%)
- Ruptured AAA is a surgical emergency with overall mortality of 65-85% (including prehospital deaths)
- For those who reach OR, mortality is still 40-50%
- Risk factors:
- Age > 65 years, male sex (6:1 ratio), smoking (strongest modifiable risk)
- Hypertension, family history, COPD, peripheral vascular disease
- Connective tissue disorders (Marfan, Ehlers-Danlos)
- Risk of rupture increases with size:
- <5 cm: ~1%/year
- 5-6 cm: ~10%/year
- >7 cm: ~30%/year
Clinical Features
Classic Triad of Ruptured AAA
- Abdominal/back pain + hypotension + pulsatile abdominal mass
- Present in only ~50% of cases
Presentations
- Intact (unruptured) AAA: usually asymptomatic or incidental finding
- Symptomatic unruptured: abdominal/back/flank pain (expanding aneurysm)
- Ruptured AAA:
- Sudden, severe abdominal or back pain (may radiate to groin, flank, or thigh)
- Hypotension / hemorrhagic shock
- Pulsatile abdominal mass (difficult to palpate in obese or hypotensive patients)
- May present as syncope or cardiac arrest
- Contained rupture: retroperitoneal hemorrhage may be temporarily tamponaded
- Transient hemodynamic stability — do not be falsely reassured
- Mimics many conditions: renal colic, diverticulitis, MI, musculoskeletal back pain
Differential Diagnosis
Diffuse Abdominal pain
- Abdominal aortic aneurysm
- Acute gastroenteritis
- Aortoenteric fisulta
- Appendicitis (early)
- Bowel obstruction
- Bowel perforation
- Diabetic ketoacidosis
- Gastroparesis
- Hernia
- Hypercalcemia
- Inflammatory bowel disease
- Mesenteric ischemia
- Pancreatitis
- Peritonitis
- Sickle cell crisis
- Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis
- Volvulus
Evaluation
Bedside Ultrasound (First-Line in ED)
- POCUS is the single most important test for unstable patients
- Sensitivity ~100% for detecting aneurysm >3 cm[1]
- Measure outer wall to outer wall in transverse view
- Cannot reliably detect rupture (free fluid may suggest it but absence does not exclude)
- US identifies the aneurysm; CT identifies the rupture
CT Angiography
- Gold standard for defining anatomy and surgical planning
- Identifies rupture, contained leak, extent, relation to renal arteries
- ONLY for hemodynamically STABLE patients
- Sensitivity for rupture approaches 100%
Labs
- Type and crossmatch (at least 6 units PRBCs)
- CBC, BMP, coagulation studies, lactate
- Do NOT delay resuscitation or imaging for labs
Management
Ruptured AAA
- Activate massive transfusion protocol
- Permissive hypotension: target SBP 70-90 mmHg
- Avoid aggressive crystalloid resuscitation; use blood products
- Emergent vascular surgery consultation
- Unstable patients go directly to OR (do NOT delay for CT)
- EVAR if anatomy suitable and resources available
- Open surgical repair if EVAR not feasible
- If arrest: consider REBOA or ED thoracotomy with aortic cross-clamp
Symptomatic Unruptured AAA
- Urgent vascular surgery consultation
- Blood pressure control: target SBP 100-120 mmHg
- Admit for expedited repair
Incidental Asymptomatic AAA
- <4 cm: surveillance US every 12 months
- 4-5.4 cm: surveillance US every 6 months; vascular referral
- >=5.5 cm: refer for elective repair
- USPSTF: one-time screening US for men 65-75 who have ever smoked
Disposition
- Ruptured: emergent OR / ICU
- Symptomatic unruptured: monitored bed, urgent vascular consult
- Asymptomatic incidental: outpatient vascular referral
See Also
References
- ↑ Tayal VS, et al. Emergency department sonographic measurement of aortic diameter. J Ultrasound Med. 2003;22(12):1291-1294. PMID 14680900
- Chaikof EL, et al. SVS practice guidelines for AAA. J Vasc Surg. 2018;67(1):2-77. PMID 29268916
- Kent KC. Abdominal aortic aneurysms. N Engl J Med. 2014;371(22):2101-2108. PMID 25427112
