VASCULAR SURGERY
NOTES VESAP 4
Basic science Cerebrovascular
Cerebrovascular Upper extremity
Upper extremity Dialysis access
Aortic and iliac Aortic and iliac
Renal and mesenteric Renal and mesenteric
Lower extremity Lower extremity
Venous and lymphatic Venous and lymphatic
Dialysis access Vascular medicine
Vascular medicine Vascular diagnosis
Vascular imaging Radiation safety
Radiation safety
Critical care PPT FOLDERS
Miscellaneous Basic science
Vascular imaging
Cerebrovascular
Aortic & iliac
*best conduit in children is hypogastric Renal & mesenteric
Upper extremity
Lower extremity
Dialysis access
Venous & lymphatic
Miscellaneous
RUTHERFORD
Ch 90 - Technique: EVAR
…
PFIZER
Hematology
Critical care
Cardiac surgery
Thoracic surgery
Vascular surgery
SABISTON
Congenital heart disease
Acquired heart disease - coronary insufficiency
Acquired heart disease - valvular
Thoracic vasculature
Cerebrovascular disease
Aneurysmal disease
Peripheral arterial occlusive disease
Vascular trauma
Venous disease
Lymphatics
Access and ports
BASIC SCIENCE
ANATOMY
Arterial wall
tunica intima - endothelial cells, connective tissue, elastic tissue
tunica media - ECM with smooth m. cells
tunica adventitia - includes autonomic innervation and vasa vasorum
PHYSIOLOGY / RESPONSE TO INJURY
Two regulatory systems control smooth m.
endothelium influences tone and growth of underlying smooth m. via inhibitory and stimulatory factors released in
response to blood flow, O2 tension, hormones, cyto/chemokines
autonomic innervation responds to activation of peripheral baroreceptors, chemoreceptors, temperature receptors
Endothelium relaxing factors
NO adhesion and coagulation of blood elements on surface, contraction of underlying smooth m.
prostacyclin platelet adhesion and aggregation, smooth m. proliferation and migration, vasodilation
Endothelium contracting factors
thromboxane opposite effects of prostacyclin
endothelin-1 potent vasoconstrictor, antagonizes actions of NO
RESPONSE TO INJURY
Endothelial dysfunction
is the initiating step in atherosclerosis
mechanical or biochemical factors (ie, free radicals from abnormal lipid metabolism, carbon monoxide, tobacco)
balance of factors shifts from to contraction, proliferation, migration of underlying smooth m. cells into intima
also adhesion of platelets, leukocytes, monocytes
Endothelium as mechanosensors
two hemodynamic forces affect endothelial cells
- shear stress frictional force at interface of endothelial surface and circulating blood
- pressure circumferential deformation of blood vessels acting perpendicular to vessel wall
Response to shear stress
******
Cell-derived microvesicles
Re-endothelialization
Re-vascularization
BASIC SCIENCE
HEMOSTASIS
PHARMACOLOGY
Anticoagulation
Thrombolysis
Antiplatelet
Hyperlipidemia
Diabetes
Smoking cessation
Anti-hypertensive
Anti-arrhythmic
Pressors, inotropes
PHARMACOLOGY
ANTICOAGULANTS
Form Dose Onset T½ Metabolism Reversal
ATIII activator
unfractionated heparin IV, SC protamine
low molecular weight heparin
enoxaparin (Lovenox) SC protamine
dalteparin (Fragmin) SC protamine
vitamin K antagonist
warfarin (Coumadin) PO 2.5-10 mg 24 h 20-60 h vit K, PCC, F7
direct factor Xa inhibitors
rivaroxaban (Xarelto) PO PCC, F7
apixaban (Eliquis) PO PCC, F7
fondaparinux (Arixtra) SC HD
direct thrombin inhibitor
dabigatran (Pradaxa) PO PCC, F7, HD
argatroban IV liver
bivalirudin IV kidney
unfractionated heparin
- binds and enhances ATIII inhibits FIIa and Xa stabilize but does not lyse clot
- use in pts with severe renal insufficiency (GFR < 30)
- monitor PTT
low molecular weight heparin (LMWH)
- mixture of smaller molecules affinity of neutralizing cells/proteins to bind with them eliminates dose-
dependent mechanism of action of unfractionated heparin
» 90% bioavailability after subcutaneous injection
- metabolized by kidneys
- risk for HIT but still possible
warfarin (Coumadin)
- vitamin K antagonist ( F II, VII, IX, X, proteins C, S)
- monitor PT
apixaban (Eliquis) is contraindicated in pts with severe liver disease
argatroban falsely elevates INR, so if bridging to warfarin use INR goal > 4
prothrombin complex concentrate (PCC)
THROMBOLYTICS
Tissue plasminogen activator (tPA)
produced by endothelial cells (mainly), vascular smooth muscle cells, fibroblasts
- most circulates bound in complex form with plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1)
- unbound form has T½ of 2-3 minutes
ANTIPLATELETS
Form Dose Onset T½ Metabolism Reversal
COX inhibitor
aspirin PO
ADP (P2Y12) receptor antagonists
clopidogrel (Plavix) PO
PHARMACOLOGY
prasugrel (Effient) PO
ticlodipine (Ticlid) PO
ticagrelor (Brilinta) PO
PDE inhibitor
cilostazol (Pletal) PO
GpIIb/IIIa inhibitors
abciximab (ReoPro) IV
eptifibatide (Integrilin) IV
tirofiban (Aggrastat) IV
adenosine re-uptake inhibitors
dipyridamole (Persantine) PO, IV
dipyridamole/ASA (Aggrenox) PO
clopidogrel (Plavix)
- ADP receptor inhibitor prevents PLT crosslinking
- does not break up existing clots
cilostazol (Pletal)
- inhibits PLT aggregation and causes vasodilation
- sometimes used to tx chronic claudication; no role in acute limb ischemia
- PDEs are contraindicated in pts with heart failure
pentoxifylline improves wound healing?
- ***
bupropion
1st line pharmacologic tx for smoking cessation
VASCULAR MEDICINE
VESAP
COMPLICATIONS
Heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT)
lab testing
- #26
associated risks
- low risk for bleeding unless plts drop below 10,000
- high risk for thrombosis up to 4 weeks after heparin is discontinued
» arterial thrombosis is more common than venous in vascular patients
management
- discontinue all heparin products
- use argatroban or bivalirudin (direct thrombin inhibitors)
Warfarin-induced skin necrosis
pts with protein C deficiency warfarin induces transient hypercoagulable state because of shorter T½ of protein C
skin necrosis, most commonly in breasts, butt, thighs, penis
Hypofibrinogenemia
complication of lytic therapy
fibrinogen < 100 mg/dl
- immediately stop lytic agent
- if further reverse coagulopathy with cryoprecipitate
Factor V Leiden mutation
most common hereditary cause of VTE
initial tx of acute DVT in heterozygotes is same as general population
Pregnancy pro-thrombotic state
hormone-related induction of clotting factors
anatomic compression of L iliac vein by gravid uterus
von Willebrand disease
most common genetic bleeding disorder
peri-op tx intermediate purity vWF and FVIII
Hyperhomocysteinemia
leads to premature arterial disease in children
commonly associated with MTHFR mutation
2-8x risk for MI or stroke, higher in F vs M
normalization of homocysteine doesn't risk of VTE and peripheral arterial thrombosis despite appropriate tx
Cigarette smoking
endothelial damage and altered function
platelet adhesion and permeability of endothelial surfaces to fibrinogen
NO availability and impairs vascular tone
VASCULAR MEDICINE
Alcohol withdrawal syndrome
peaks on day 3-5
may develop delirium tremens, grand mal seizures
- delirium tremens fever, tachycardia, hypertension, tremors, diaphoresis, hallucinations, disorientation,
agitation, urinary incontinence
at-risk pts should be given prophylactic doses of benzodiazepines
RISK ASSESSMENT
Revised Cardiac Risk Index (RCRI)
estimates peri-operative cardiac events in pts undergoing non-cardiac surgery
six independent predictors of major complications
- high-risk surgery (vascular surgery, open intraperitoneal or intrathoracic surgery)
- history of ischemic heart disease
- history of heart failure
- history of cerebrovascular disease
- insulin dependent DM
- pre-op Cr > 2
Carotid = moderate risk surgery
VASCULAR IMAGING
***
Brain MRI with diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) is most Sn and Sp imaging technique for acute infarction
Venous US
^ shows acute thrombosis of GSV and chronic thrombotic disease of femoral vein
VASCULAR DIAGNOSIS
CEREBROVASCULAR
CEREBROVASCULAR
CAROTID
Carotid artery stenosis (CAS)
time to intervention after stroke/TIA is strongest determinant of stroke or death
- early carotid endarterectomy, ie, when neurologic and clinical condition have stabilized
» within 2 days stroke and death rate 11.5%
» within 3-7 days 3.6%
» within 8-14 days 4%
» within 15-180 days 5.4%
- pts who remain hemiplegic are usually not candidates for intervention
intracranial tandem ICA siphon lesion
- tx carotid bulb dz first, then optimal medical management, then tx intracranial lesion only if sx persist
stump syndrome
- chronic ICA occlusion and ipsilateral focal neurologic symptoms
» microemboli arise from stump of occluded ICA or ipsilateral ECA that can pass into MCA due to patent ECA-
ICA anastomotic channels
- tx with endarterectomy of CCA and ECA with transection of ICA (to eliminate potential embolic source) and patch
angioplasty
- best results in pts with monocular amaurosis fugax
concomitant/incidental ICA aneurysm
- tx separately based on their own guidelines
- tx aneurysm first if ≥ 8 mm
asymptomatic CAS in pt with renal failure on HD no intervention
- pts on HD have high perioperative and long-term stroke and death rates after carotid intervention for
asymptomatic stenosis
- age > 70 and > 2 years on HD are predictive of death
- renal transplant is protective
external carotid stenosis
- external CEA can be therapeutic in pt with hemispheric sx and ipsilateral ICA occlusion
- ECA can serve as important collateral
- can also be a source of embolization to ophthalmic artery via collaterals
- important to transect and oversew the proximal stump of ipsilateral ICA
Carotid endarterectomy (CEA)
maneuvers for distal carotid artery exposure (ie, for high ICA bifurcation)
- medial mobilization of hypoglossal nerve -- first and easiest step
- division of posterior belly of digastric muscle (risk for glossopharyngeal injury, posterior to muscle)
- resection of styloid process
- anterior subluxation of mandible
- nasotracheal intubation
eversion technique ideal for pts with coils and kinks of ICA because ICA can be resected or moved down on the
common carotid
cerebral perfusion monitoring during CEA
- awake neurologic observation (most reliable)
- carotid stump back pressure (> 40 indicates adequate perfusion)
- EEG monitoring
- sensory evoke potentials
bradycardia during CEA
- carotid sinus
» located at carotid bifurcation
CEREBROVASCULAR
» has baroreceptors that produce bradycardia and hypotension when stimulated by increased pressure or
surgical manipulation
» innervated by carotid sinus nerve (of Hering) which arises from glossopharyngeal nerve
- give atropine or other anticholinergic drug as initial treatment
- some surgeons routinely inject 1-2 cc of lidocaine near sinus to prevent or treat bradycardia
- vasopressors may be required for persistent hypotension
CEA post-op complications
cerebral hyperperfusion syndrome
- manifests as severe ipsilateral headache and hypertension after CEA
- risk factors
» uncontrolled hypertension (goal < 140/80)
» CEA for high-grade symptomatic stenosis
» contralateral high-grade stenosis or occlusion or hx of CEA
› 14.3% incidence when staged CEAs were less than 3 months apart compared to 0% when interval was
greater
» urgent operation
» recent ipsilateral stroke
- high mortality (~38%)
- management non-contrast CT and aggressive BP control in ICU
cranial nerve injuries - occurs in 5-20% of CEAs
- marginal mandibular branch of facial nerve ipsilateral drooping of corner of mouth
» typically result of cephalad retraction on mandible (not clamp injury)
- glossopharyngeal nerve can lead to persistent pulmonary aspiration; pts often need feeding tube
» typically occurs during division of posterior belly of digastric muscle
- vagus nerve unilateral vocal cord paralysis and hoarseness
- hypoglossal nerve ipsilateral tongue deviation
ICA dissection
- may be due to shunt placement or a flap at the endarterectomy endpoint
- reclamping and revising flap at distal endpoint would be appropriate unless it is too distal to reach, then can use
endovascular stent instead
- don't use anticoagulation in setting of fresh CEA
Carotid shunt
used to maintain cerebral perfusion during CEA
indications
- cases in which circle of Willis is not intact, ie, contralateral carotid occlusion
- pts with recent ischemic event will have an area of ischemic penumbra which benefits from increased perfusion
pressure
additional methods to evaluate role of shunting
- transcranial Doppler
- sensory evoke potentials
- cerebral oximetry
hx of contralateral stroke alone is not a general indication for shunt placement
Early ischemic stroke management (AHA 2015 guidelines)
IV lytic therapy up to 4.5 hours after onset of symptoms
- tPA 0.9 mg/kg (max dose 90 mg IV)
- should be given even if endovascular tx is being considered
CEREBROVASCULAR
CREST (Carotid Revascularization Endarterectomy Versus Stenting Trial)
largest randomized controlled trial comparing CEA and stenting
found no significant difference in a composite outcome of stroke, MI, and death (hazard ratio 1.11; 95%CI 0.81-1.51)
lower rates of complications in both groups than observed in previous trials
supported both procedures as safe and effective treatment options
- results have been attributed to highly trained interventionists involved in study, limits external validity
rate of periprocedural stroke was higher in the stenting group while the rate of MI was higher in the CEA group
conclusion no definitive superior treatment for CAS and tx decisions should be individualized to patients'
characteristics and needs
ACAS (Asymptomatic Carotid Atherosclerosis Study)
objective was to determine whether the addition of CEA to aggressive medical management can incidence of
cerebral infarction in patients with asymptomatic CAS
multicenter study of 1600 pts with asx carotid stenosis ≥ 60%, randomized to medical management vs. medical
management and CEA
stroke and death risk at 5 years by 5.9% (5.1% vs. 11%)
conclusion pts with asymptomatic carotid artery stenosis ≥ 60% whose general health makes them good candidates
for elective surgery will have a 5-yr risk of ipsilateral stroke if CEA performed with < 3% perioperative morbidity and
mortality (added to aggressive management of modifiable risk factors)
reproduced by European randomized study, the Asymptomatic Carotid Surgery Trial (ACST)
NASCET (North American Symptomatic Carotid Endarterectomy Trial)
1400 patients
showed a significant benefit for CEA for pts with symptomatic carotid stenosis > 50%, compared to medical
management alone
pts with stenosis > 70% had 17% risk reduction for stroke at 2 years which persisted at 8 yr follow up
conclusions
- overall rate of perioperative stroke and death was 6.5%, but rate of permanently disabling stroke and death was
only 2.0%
- other surgical complications were rarely clinically important
- CEA is a durable procedure
GALA
prospective European multicenter randomized study with 3526 patients
50% underwent CEA with local anesthesia vs. 50% under general anesthesia
no significant difference in incidence of primary outcome of stroke, death, or MI at 30 days
- 4.5% for local vs. 4.8% for general
main benefit for local anesthesia is neurologic monitoring during surgery and selective shunting
WARSS (Warfarin Aspirin Recurrent Stroke Study)
no difference between aspirin alone and warfarin alone in preventing recurrent ischemic stroke or death in 2-yr
period
CHANCE (Clopidogrel in High-risk patients with Acute Non-disabling Cerebrovascular Events)
in first 90 days after stroke, there was significant reduction in recurrent stroke
- 8.2% in pts given clopidogrel and aspirin
- 11.7% in pts given aspirin alone
CEREBROVASCULAR
Fibromuscular dysplasia of ICA
classified by layer of vessel wall involved
- medial fibroplasia - most common
» classically occurs in middle-aged women
» results in multiple short stenoses of distal ICA with areas of aneurysmal dilation ("string of beads")
» management
› antiplatelet therapy
› further intervention if medical therapy fails angioplasty alone
› avoid stenting unless there is an associated aneurysm or dissection
- intimal fibroplasia, medial hyperplasia - commonly appear as single, concentric stenosis or long tapering stenosis
of renal and internal carotid arteries
- adventitial hyperplasia - very rare and usually seen in localized stenosis
- perimedial dysplasia - commonly affects renal arteries and is associated with macroaneurysms
Iatrogenic carotid injury (ie, arterial line/sheath placement)
CTA prior to intervention to identify presence and extent of any thrombus adherent to catheter
if 6 Fr or smaller and recognized early pull and hold pressure
if 7 Fr or larger cut down and open repair (endovascular tx if exposure would be too difficult)
closure device is off-label and not ideal given likelihood of atherosclerosis
Carotid artery dissection
classic presentation facial pain, headache, partial Horner syndrome
typically occurs several centimeters distal to bifurcation
risk for ischemic stroke and recurrent dissection is highest in days to weeks following initial dissection event (25%)
stroke can be result of thromboembolization (more common) or acute dissection extending into ICA
management
- prevent stroke with anti-thrombotic agent
- endovascular or surgical tx is reserved for small minority of cases who progress with cerebrovascular events
despite optimal medical tx
extension of acute type A aortic dissection
- increase in stroke rate at time of presentation but no difference after acute event (compared to those with
dissection confined to arch alone)
- medical tx (antiplatelet or anticoagulation) if asymptomatic
traumatic carotid dissection
- mainstay for treatment is anticoagulation
» antiplatelet and systemic anticoagulation have been proven to be effective
» consider aspirin if heparin gtt is relatively contraindicated (ie, associated injuries like liver lac or SDH)
- endovascular or operative intervention may be considered if pt has a neurologic deficit, especially if fluctuating
Extracranial carotid artery aneurysm (ECAA)
poor prognosis if left untreated 50% risk for stroke and death
#1 most common presentation is related to thromboemboli, #2 mass effect
management
- open surgical repair carotid interposition graft with rGSV
- covered stent would be difficult due to size mismatch of
proximal carotid and distal to aneurysm
CEREBROVASCULAR
Carotid body tumor
neuroendocrine tumor
supplied by perforators from external carotid
work up
- 24 hour urine collection for metanephrines and catecholamines
- 123I-metaiodobenzylbuanidine scintigraphy (r CT, MRI) of chest and abdomen to exclude
other paragangliomas
- angiogram shows splaying of carotid bifurcation ("goblet sign")
physical exam findings - Fontaine sign ?? - mass moves vertically with palpation
Shamblin classification
- predicts ease of resection
- determined by preoperative imaging, operative findings, and pathologic analysis
Arteritis
Takayasu arteritis
- younger patients, female predominance
- generally affects aorta (ie, middle aortic syndrome) and primary branches
Giant cell arteritis
- older patients, equal M:F
- generally affects more distal arterial segments (ie, axillary artery is common)
management
- endovascular or open intervention is not recommended during active inflammatory phase (ie, fever, myalgia,
rash, ESR)
- primary tx with immunosuppression (ie, steroids) to limit or prevent subsequent occlusive disease
» alternatives if resistant to steroids azathioprine, MTX, MMF, cyclophosphamide; infliximab (anti-TNF alpha)
if resistant to everything
- open surgical reconstruction during quiescent or occlusive phase of disease if symptomatic
» most durable and appropriate revascularization in young patients is bypass graft from ascending aorta (which
is uninvolved in Takayasu)
- angioplasty has recurrent stenosis rate of 50% at mid-term follow up
VERTEBRAL / SUBCLAVIAN
Vertebral artery stenosis
Horner syndrome is most common complication associated with open repair
Vertebrobasilar insufficiency
severe carotid disease should be addressed first if present -- may improve vertebrobasilar perfusion via collaterals,
obviating the need for a more complex vertebrobasilar reconstruction
Positional posterior insufficiency (aka Bow hunter syndrome)
caused by dynamic compromise of a dominant vertebral artery, typically secondary to compression of the vessel by a
hypertrophic osteophyte, cervical spondylosis, fibrous band, or thickened atlantoaxial membrane
CEREBROVASCULAR
digital subtraction angiography is preferred diagnostic tool because it identifies the precise
location and confirms rotational compression
treatment options
- cervical fixation
- osseous decompression with removal of bone or fibrous tissue
- if pt has atherosclerotic disease distal vertebral bypass is curative
- if pt has significant concurrent ICA disease and intact circle of Willis tx carotid dz
Subclavian stenosis / steal syndrome
proximal subclavian stenosis retrograde flow through vertebral artery arm supplied at
the expense of vertebrobasilar circulation
- reversed vertebral flow is a frequent incidental finding on carotid duplex
- does not need tx if asymptomatic
more severe than typical vertebrobasilar insufficiency
physical exam shows BP in arm
symptoms arm weakness, vertebrobasilar insufficiency
duplex shows reversal of flow through vertebral artery
management
- if high-grade CAS and intact circle of Willis CEA to allow collateral flow to posterior
brain
- if no high-grade CAS direct transposition of vertebral to carotid artery
» type of open revascularization for vertebral lesions depends on location
› ostial lesion or inflow stenosis vertebral transposition or endarterectomy
› more distal V2 and V3 lesions bypass with either the branches of ECA or ICA as inflow sources
Coronary-subclavian steal syndrome
secondary to proximal subclavian artery occlusion
tx carotid-subclavian bypass with prosthetic graft
- short prosthetic grafts have better patency over vein in supraclavicular region
- subclavian to carotid transposition is not indicated in patient with LIMA coronary graft because of the ischemic
time during the anastomosis (carotid-subclavian bypass can be done distal to take-off of LIMA without disturbing
coronary flow)
.?? v-lab findings for subclavian stenosis vs. occlusion
early systolic deceleration in vertebral artery stenosis
tardus parvus
- tardus = prolonged systolic acceleration - ie, slow upstroke
- parvus = small systolic amplitude and rounding of systolic peak
reversal of flow in vertebral artery, significant difference in brachial BPs occluded subclavian artery
Phrenic nerve injury
can occur during exposure of left subclavian artery (ie, during carotid-subclavian bypass)
left phrenic nerve courses over anterior scalene muscle, which lies between L subclavian vein (anterior) and artery
(posterior)
results in elevated hemi-diaphragm and possible respiratory distress
CEREBROVASCULAR
CEREBROVASCULAR
…….
AORTIC & ILIAC
AORTIC & ILIAC
VESAP
THORACIC AORTA
Blunt thoracic aortic injury (BTAI)
SVS grade
- I - intimal tear
- II - intramural hematoma
» tx urgent TEVAR within first 24 hours
- III - pseudoaneurysm
» most common
» tx immediate TEVAR
- IV - rupture
CTA is best test for dx (Sn, Sp, convenient)
TEVAR for BTAI
- ok to cover L subclavian - most tolerate it without
adverse events (ie, arm ischemia)
- #1 complication is endograft malposition or endoleak
Type B aortic dissection
management
- medical tx goal is to BP and dP/dT to avoid rupture and stop dissection propagation
» start IV β blocker (ie, esmolol)
» goal SBP 100-120 and HR 60-80
- indications for repair (endovascular or open)
» aneurysmal degeneration (most common long-term complication)
» malperfusion (ie, ischemia of visceral vessels or iliac arteries)
» retrograde type A dissection
» rupture
» intractable pain
- long-term management - continue medical tx and surveillance if uncomplicated
» INSTEAD and ADSORB trials
› randomized pts with uncomplicated type B aortic dissection to best medical tx (BMT) vs. BMT and TEVAR
› both studies failed to show significant survival benefit with TEVAR
complications
- aneurysm
» late aneurysm is most common complication in pts with uncomplicated type B treated medically (40%)
- retrograde type A dissection
» may have chest pain (extension into aortic arch) and/or neuro deficits (carotid)
» CTA of arch and thoracic aorta is diagnostic and helps with OR planning
AORTIC & ILIAC
TEVAR zones
TEVAR zone 2 coverage
defined by coverage of L subclavian but distal to L common carotid
subclavian revascularization is not mandatory but some reports show benefits including risk of anterior/posterior
stroke, spinal cord ischemia, LUE ischemia
- patency rates of subclavian transposition and carotid-subclavian bypass are both excellent and equivalent
Penetrating aortic ulcer (PAU) / Intramural hematoma (IMH)
PAU - characterized by disruption in aortic media, often occurs in pts with extensive atherosclerosis
IMH - collection of thrombosed blood in media (ie, dissection w/o entry tear and w/ thrombosed false lumen)
considerable overlap between the two, 80% of PAUs have associated IMH
can occur anywhere along aorta
differ from classic dissection bc they rarely propagate into branch vessels, they rupture more frequently, and more
common in older pts due to atherosclerosis association
management
- EVAR - safe/effective, but need relatively long graft coverage to ensure exclusion of potentially diseased segments
- open - some surgeons prefer this due to concern for landing endograft in friable or dissected tissue
Spinal cord ischemia (SCI) after thoracic aortic surgery
AORTIC & ILIAC
mechanism of injury triad - disruption of spinal cord's arterial collaterals, spinal cord perfusion pressure,
ischemia/reperfusion
- spinal cord perfusion pressure = arterial perfusion pressure - CSF pressure
- high aortic x-clamp proximal HTN CSF pressure spinal cord perfusion
can occur as late as 2 weeks post-op
tx lumbar drain ( CSF pressure) or permissive arterial HTN
ABDOMINAL AORTA
Thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysm
Crawford classification (figures below)
pre-op HD is the pre-op variable most associated with mortality
- age, emergent repair, male gender, extent II aneurysm also associated with morbidity and mortality
risk for paraplegia with open and endo repairs
- correlates with segmental arteries sacrificed
- pts undergoing repair for extent II aneurysm have highest risk
- adjunctive measures to risk include lumbar drain, distal perfusion (using L heart bypass, cardiopulmonary
bypass, or circulatory arrest), spinal cord hypothermia, permissive HTN
- delayed paraplegia may be secondary to "second hit" phenomenon where vulnerable pt develops post-op
hypotension, lumbar drain malfunction, bleeding
» better prognosis than immediate, with 44% of pts recovering neuro function by discharge with the use of
adjunctive measures
- immediate paraplegia may be secondary to diffuse embolization to spinal cord
Abdominal aortic aneurysm
risk factors
- smoking is strongest predictor (odds ratio 3-12)
- vitamin B6 (odds ratio 3.75)
- family hx (odds ratio 1.9)
protective factors
- diabetes - proposed mechanisms include hyperinsulinemia and hyperglycemia (can alter metabolism of arterial
matrix), and effects of pharmacologic tx in DM management (can stabilize mural thrombi and inflammation)
- female gender - likely due to immune modulating effects of estrogen
Juxta-renal aortic aneurysm
variable size and anatomy of renal arteries needs to be considered when assessing for possible fenestrated EVAR
- renal arteries < 5 mm have risk for stenosis after covered stent placement
- snorkel configurations are even less optimal bc of long length of covered stent used
- unstented fenestrations are more likely to occlude because of dynamic movement of fenestrated main body,
renal arteries, and aorta
- early bifurcation of renal artery usually requires sacrifice of one of the branches by covered stent
AORTIC & ILIAC
Aortocaval fistula
arises as a result of contained aneurysm rupture into vena cava
if open AAA repair, will see severe dark red bleeding from right posterior aspect of aorta into aneurysm sac
tx primary repair of bleeding hole from within aneurysm
- do not attempt to mobilize vena cava or other structures
- if dx prior to open exploration, endo repair has been reported with superior results
EVAR vs. open repair
open repair has 3-6x risk of 30-day mortality compared to EVAR (EVAR-1, DREAM, OVER trials)
- early survival benefit persists for 2-3 years then survival rates become equivalent
EVAR has risk for late rupture (5.4% vs. 1.4% of open repairs)
Renal transplant patients with AAA
best tx is EVAR - hydrate, minimize contrast or use CO2, minimize ipsilateral catheter/wire manipulation
open repair - methods for renal protection
- keep warm ischemia time < 30 minutes (kidneys can tolerate ~ 50 min)
- temporary shunts/bypasses (aortoiliac, aortofemoral, subclavian, ax-fem)
- in situ perfusion with pump oxygenator via femoral vessels
- explant with temporary perfusion, then reimplant
Endoleak
type 1
- 1a - proximal, 1b - distal
type 2
- associated with hypogastric coil embolization and distal graft extension
Graft infection
Endograft infection
may present with general malaise, weight loss
CT demonstrates air within aneurysm sac
risk factors
- chronic infection in other anatomic sites, groin complications after EVAR, rupture
treatment complete graft excision with in situ or extra-anatomic reconstruction
- in situ reconstruction can use rifampin-soaked Dacron, vein, or cryo-preserved
aortic homograft
» in situ reconstruction is best for low virulence infections (ie, S. aureus or epi)
» extra-anatomic reconstruction better if gram negative, polymicrobial, grossly purulent, necrotic
- risk mortality than explants performed for endoleak
- aortic ligation usually avoided due to risk for stump blowout, major amputation, or reinfection of ax-fem graft
Endograft limb occlusion
most common in first 6 months after repair and more common with older generation grafts
tx endovascular recanalization successful if able to correct areas of kink or compression
Post-aneurysm repair colon ischemia
management
- if hemodynamically stable and partial thickness (grade 1-2) on flex sig observation, fluid resuscitation, abx
- if unstable or full thickness ischemia (grade 3) on flex sig laparotomy and possible partial colon resection
- no role for anticoagulation
Abdominal compartment syndrome after ruptured AAA repair
risk if ruptured, unstable pts with higher blood transfusion requirements; no change in risk for open vs. endo repair
mortality
AORTIC & ILIAC
4 risk factors for compartment syndrome after EVAR for ruptured AAA
- use of aortic occlusion balloon
- massive transfusion
- coagulopathy
- need to convert to aorto-uniiliac device
tx immediate decompressive laparotomy (preferred over aggressive fluid resuscitation)
Acute aortic occlusion
in situ thrombosis (ie, pre-existing aortoiliac atherosclerosis) is more common than a-fib (72% vs. 28%)
tx depends on clinical scenario, no difference between open and endovascular revascularization
Aortic atherosclerosis
can present with post-prandial abdominal pain (if visceral segment involved) and/or claudication
tx open aortic endarterectomy
- endovascular management has risk for visceral or distal embolization, and dissection-associated occlusion of
visceral vessels
Middle aortic syndrome
narrowing of abdominal or distal thoracic aorta claudication, refractory HTN, post-prandial abdominal pain with
unintentional weight loss
- high rate of concomitant stenosis in renal (63%) and visceral (33%) arteries
may be congenital or acquired (inflammatory causes, ie, Takayasu, temporal arteritis)
most pts present in childhood or teen years
tx descending thoracic to distal aortic bypass with branches to celiac, SMA, and bilateral renal arteries
Trauma
infrarenal aortic injury > 50% wall defect + associated colon injury with fecal contamination + hemodynamic instability
- tx synthetic graft repair with omental coverage of graft and fecal diversion
» aortic ligation is fastest option but will result in significant lower extremity hypoperfusion
» delayed, or even expedient extra-anatomic bypass after ligation will contribute to ischemia-reperfusion injury
» saphenous vein patch repair will take too much time and natural hx of this type of repair is not well known
» creation of neoaorta using femoral vein is a more robust conduit but takes too much time and expertise
» primary repair is not an option considering degree of defect
Abdominal exposures
Cattell-Braasch maneuver (R medial visceral rotation) IVC and origin of renal veins
Mattox maneuver (left medial visceral rotation) suprarenal aorta
Blunt injury to common/external iliac artery (ie, MVC with pelvic frx)
high morbidity and mortality
pts with pseudoaneurysm, AVF, or major intimal tears with or without thrombosis endovascular stent
if unstable, open repair is not advised
AORTIC & ILIAC
AORTIC & ILIAC
RUTHERFORD
CH 9 - TECHNIQUE: EVAR
Configurations
bifurcated grafts used in 95% of cases
can be unibody or modular
aorto-uni-iliac (AUI) configuration
- can be used with contralateral iliac occlusion device and fem-fem bypass
- relative indications
» very small (< 15 mm) terminal aorta, which would not accommodate a bifurcated device
» severe unilateral iliac occlusive disease
» secondary tx of migration of a short-body endograft
branched and fenestrated grafts can be used in juxtarenal and/or pararenal aneurysms and thoracic aneurysms where
there is inadequate normal aorta to achieve seal adjacent to a critical side branch
Sizing
factors to consider as per intended use in IFU (instructions for use)
- iliac tortuosity
- vessel diameter (EI)
- angulation of distal neck
- aneurysmal sac orientation
- mural thrombus within aneurysm
- iliofemoral disease (ie, calcification, stenosis)
- iliac length (short iliac contralateral)
- iliac aneurysm (ipsilateral)
neck diameter
- measure at level of lowest renal artery and 15 mm caudal
- grafts should be oversized 10-20% relative to aortic neck, usually about 3-4 mm
» EVAR devices range from 20-36 mm diameters, which txs aortic diameters of 18-32 mm
» TEVAR devices range from 21-45 mm and can tx 16-42 mm
- conical aortic neck
» > 2-3 mm change over the first 15 mm length of aortic length
» when oversizing, split the difference to give > 10% oversizing in large segment and < 30% in smaller segment
» if degree of size mismatch doesn't allow that, EVAR is not advised
length
- count axial cuts from lowest renal artery to aortic bifurcation
» very accurate in absence of tortuosity or neck angulation
» axial measurements underestimate length between bifurcation and hypogastric arteries, esp if tortuous
» length measurements based on centerline calculations overestimate true length
- balleting iliac limbs can facilitate cannulation of contra gate of short-bodied modular grafts
iliac diameters
- oversize 10-20%
Patient selection
character of aortic neck is the major anatomic factor predicting suitability for EVAR
- length, diameter, angulation, shape
- minimum neck length 10-15 mm
- angulation < 45-60°
- maximum diameter 32 mm
AORTIC & ILIAC
- shape
» parallel neck without any eccentric laminated thrombus is ideal
» irregular shaped necks have risk of inadequate seal
› conical or reverse conical (see above)
› localized posterior bulge ("double bubble")
RENAL & MESENTERIC
Look up tx for renal artery aneurysms based on location
Renal artery stenosis
can be secondary to FMD, Takayasu arteritis, etc.
predictors of improved renal function with revascularization
- rapid decline in pre-op renal function - most predictive
- high grade stenosis
- treating bilateral moderate to severe stenoses with stenting is more likely to be associated with improved renal
function (vs. treating higher grade unilateral stenosis)
- kidney length > 9 cm, renal resistive index (RI) < 0.8 renal function likely to improve with intervention
most common complication of renal artery stenting is access site pseudoaneurysm
Renal artery aneurysm
bilateral in 10% of cases
most are saccular
most commonly due to congenital medial degenerative process with weakness of elastic lamina
most are asymptomatic, < 3% rupture
- calcification is thought to provide a protective factor against rupture
indications for repair
- female currently or planning to become pregnant
- symptoms
- ≥ 2 cm if asymptomatic
Fibromuscular dysplasia
aneurysms associated with FMD are usually only a few mm in size
medial fibroplasia variant is most common
- angiographic appearance of “string of beads”
catheter-based angiography is most accurate imaging technique
- able to visualize smaller branch vessels and identify the changes of aneurysm formation and dissection
- up to 25% of pts will have only branch lesions
management angioplasty alone
- stents are unnecessary and have risk of restenosis
- known complication of angioplasty is dissection which would require a stent
- can treat bilaterally at the same time, no need to stage interventions
Renal arteriovenous malformation
can be congenital (0.04% incidence, represents 20-25% of all renal AVFs) or acquired (spontaneous, FMD, aneurysm,
malignancy, trauma, percutaneous biopsy)
most are asymptomatic
tx when symptomatic selective embolization is preferred
RENAL & MESENTERIC
Acute renal vein thrombosis
diagnosis CT angiogram
treatment
- correct fluid and electrolyte imbalances, HD if needed, antihypertensive meds, systemic anticoagulation
- percutaneous catheter-directed thrombectomy ± thrombolysis rapid improvement in renal function and low
morbidity
- surgical thrombectomy is rarely used since parenchymal thrombus can't be cleared
- all pts should undergo hypercoagulable work up
Nutcracker syndrome
compression of distal segment of left renal vein between SMA and aorta
symptoms include left flank pain radiating to buttock and hematuria
Segmental arterial mediolysis
rare, acute, often self-limiting disorder generally limited to visceral vessels
pathogenesis thought to be related to vasospasm
- overstimulation of alpha-1 receptors may lead to intense vasoconstriction followed by apoptosis or shearing
separation of the adventitia from the media, resulting in bleeding at the adventitial-medial junction
classic findings include arterial dilation, aneurysms, hematomas, stenosis, occlusion
Hepatic artery aneurysm
80% are extrahepatic
- common hepatic 63%
- right hepatic 28%
- left hepatic 5%
- right and left hepatic 4%
Splenic artery aneurysm
most common visceral artery aneurysm
female to male ratio 4:1
rupture is rare when < 2 cm
during pregnancy, rupture leads to 70% mortality for mother and 75% for fetus
- single most compelling indication for intervention is planned pregnancy
treat with embolization, stent graft, or splenectomy when > 2 cm
usually treat in transplant recipients
Pancreatic pseudoaneurysm of splenic artery
differs from splenic artery due to atherosclerosis
natural history is poorly defined with bleeding as potential consequence
treat with covered stent
Pancreaticoduodenal artery aneurysm
account for 10% of splanchnic aneurysms
these and GDA aneurysms have higher propensity to rupture so usually tx'd regardless of symptoms
- tx women who are or are planning to get pregnant, transplant recipients, aneurysms > 20-25 mm
can be tx'd endovascularly
SMA aneurysms
uncommon, 5.5% of all splanchnic aneurysms
most are proximal
60% have reported infectious etiology (ie, mycotic aneurysm)
tx if > 2 cm even if asymptomatic
- covered stent may not be appropriate depending on length and number of branches
RENAL & MESENTERIC
- open repair associated with 10-15% mortality
Mesenteric collaterals
meandering artery (aka arc of Riolan, artery of Moskowitz) (most prominent) connects SMA and IMA via middle
branch of middle colic artery and ascending branch of left colic artery
pancreaticoduodenal arteries connect celiac axis and SMA
marginal artery of Drummond connects SMA and IMA
hypogastric collateral arises from hemorrhoidal artery
Acute mesenteric ischemia
most common cause is an arterial embolic event
2nd most common is acute arterial thrombosis superimposed on pre-existing severe atherosclerotic disease (25-30%)
SMA is involved in 70% of cases
least common cause is mesenteric vein thrombosis (6-9%)
most common lab abnormality is leukocytosis (not lactic acidosis, this occurs with more advanced ischemia)
CTA is preferred imaging modality
treatment
- start systemic anticoagulation immediately
- exploratory laparotomy overt necrotic bowel should be resected immediately to avoid further soilage
- open embolectomy for acute ischemia secondary to embolus
» expose SMA in root of mesentery, inferior to pancreas and transverse colon
» transverse arteriotomy preferred because it can be closed primarily
- mesenteric bypass if there is pre-existing mesenteric arterial occlusive disease
» choice of bypass conduit (synthetic vs. vein) is determined by degree of contamination
» can be antegrade or retrograde, tailor to circumstance
Chronic mesenteric ischemia
duplex criteria
- celiac PSV > 200 (70% stenosis) or EDV > 55 (50% stenosis)
- SMA PSV > 275 (70% stenosis) or EDV > 45 (50% stenosis)
SMA Doppler waveforms
normal, fasting pt high resistance, PSV < 275, no spectral broadening
normal, postprandial low resistance, slightly increased PSV, little to no spectral broadening
SMA stenosis (> 70%), fasting delay in systolic upstroke, markedly elevated PSV, significant spectral broadening (see
picture)
RENAL & MESENTERIC
Non-occlusive mesenteric ischemia (NOMI)
occurs when limited blood flow to gut results in insufficient O2 delivery for given demand despite patent vessels
- inciting factors include MI, septic shock, prolonged vasopressors, excessive fluid removal with HD
angiogram shows spasm of mesenteric arcades and alternating dilation and narrowing
tx by alleviating source of hypoperfusion
- in rare cases, intra-arterial infusion of vasodilator (ie, nitro, papaverine) into SMA may be considered
Median arcuate ligament syndrome
tx with laparoscopic decompression of celiac axis
SMA syndrome
characterized by compression of 3rd portion of duodenum by SMA intermittent/partial SBO
can be secondary to loss of mesenteric fat from rapid weight loss or catabolic states
aorto-mesenteric angle < 25° can be associated with duodenal compression (normal 45°)
management
- trial of conservative tx with NJ feeds to restore nutritional status and potentially relieve symptoms
- if fails then duodenojejunostomy can bypass obstruction
- no role for vascular reconstruction
Mesenteric bypass
antegrade bypass from supraceliac aorta is preferred because of long-term patency and straightforward geometry
retrograde bypass
- indicated when antegrade bypass or aortomesenteric endarterectomy are not feasible
RENAL & MESENTERIC
» severe cardiac disease (increases risk of clamping supraceliac aorta)
» inaccessible supraceliac aorta due to previous operations
» severely calcified or aneurysmal supraceliac aorta
- prosthetic graft preferred in absence of infected field due to risk of kinking compared to vein
Exposures
SMA
- in root of mesentery, inferior to pancreas and transverse colon
infrarenal IVC
- Cattell-Braasch maneuver medial rotation of R colon, hepatic flexure, duodenum
UPPER EXTREMITIY
UPPER EXTREMITIY
Subclavian artery stenosis
common but usually asymptomatic
present with > 20 mmHg difference between brachial pressures
sx include exertional arm pain, fatigue, numbness; may have atheroembolic digital ischemia ± tissue loss
tx if symptomatic angioplasty with balloon expandable stent placement if preferred
- usually need to tx regardless of sx if pt has ipsilateral AVF or LIMA-CABG
Subclavian steal syndrome
proximal subclavian stenosis retrograde vertebral flow arm supplied at the expense of
vertebrobasilar circulation
more severe than typical vertebrobasilar insufficiency
symptoms arm weakness, vertebrobasilar insufficiency
duplex shows reversal of flow through vertebral artery
- also a frequent incidental finding on carotid duplex and does not need tx if asx
management
- if high-grade CAS and intact circle of Willis CEA to allow collateral flow to posterior
brain
- if no high-grade CAS direct transposition of vertebral to carotid artery
» type of open revascularization for vertebral lesions depends on location
› ostial lesion or inflow stenosis vertebral transposition or endarterectomy
› more distal V2 and V3 lesions bypass with either the branches of ECA or ICA as inflow sources
Coronary-subclavian steal syndrome
secondary to proximal subclavian stenosis/occlusion proximal to an internal mammary to coronary bypass
tx carotid-subclavian bypass with prosthetic graft
- can be done distal to take-off of LIMA without disturbing coronary flow
- short prosthetic grafts have better patency over vein in supraclavicular region
- subclavian-carotid transposition is not indicated in pt with LIMA coronary graft because of ischemic time
- subclavian-subclavian bypass has inferior patency rate
Subclavian artery atherosclerosis
atherosclerotic plaque of supra-aortic trunks most commonly affects L subclavian artery at its origin
Dysphagia lusoria / aberrant R subclavian artery
esophageal compression secondary to aberrant R subclavian artery (travels posterior to esophagus) dysphagia
most common congenital anomaly of aortic arch (0.5-1% prevalence)
associated with non-recurrent R laryngeal nerve
aberrant R SC has 60% risk for aneurysmal degeneration in proximal portion (Kommerell diverticulum)
tx transposition of R SC onto R common carotid ± thoracic aortic endograft to cover origin of aberrant R SC
Iatrogenic subclavian artery injury (ie, inadvertent line insertion)
location makes manual compression difficult
best tx covered stent
open surgery sometimes needed
- proximal subclavian median sternotomy
- distal subclavian infraclavicular incision
Subclavian artery aneurysm
in teens, young adults - usually result from post-stenotic dilation secondary to cervical rib
management
- arterial decompression (ie, cervical rib resection) via supraclavicular approach allows for complete assessment of
subclavian artery and exposure of brachial plexus which is often displaced anteriorly
UPPER EXTREMITIY
- laterality of dominant vertebral artery is the most important anatomic consideration regarding neurologic
morbidity
Left subclavian-to-carotid transposition
transverse supraclavicular incision over the two heads of SCM
thoracic duct and L vertebral vein are ligated
omohyoid muscle is divided to improve exposure of proximal subclavian artery and origin of vertebral artery
anterior scalene is not usually divided
L SC artery ligated proximal to L vertebral artery, then anastomosed to L common carotid posterior to jugular vein
Thoracic outlet - three anatomic components
scalene triangle
- most common site of brachial plexus compression
- site of cervical or anomalous first rib if present, compressing brachial plexus
costoclavicular space - between first rib and clavicle
- traversed by all 3 structures (subclavian artery, vein, brachial plexus)
- most common site of subclavian vein compression
pectoralis minor space
Arterial thoracic outlet syndrome (TOS)
rarest form of TOS
most commonly from compression of subclavian artery at level of first rib within scalene triangle
- can present with subclavian aneurysm
- tx decompression with at least first/cervical rib resection ± scalenectomy
» supra- or infraclavicular incision if you need to reconstruct artery (vs. transaxillary if just resecting rib, ie, for
vTOS)
variant (20%) - positional compression of axillary artery by head of humerus during overhand throwing
- tx axillary artery reconstruction (including interposition bypass, patch angioplasty, and/or thrombectomy) with
ligation of aneurysmal branch vessels
UPPER EXTREMITIY
Venous thoracic outlet syndrome (aka Paget Schroetter syndrome)
usually young athletic person presenting with upper extremity swelling, thrombosis
management pharmaco-mechanical thrombolysis/thrombectomy then early first rib resection
- first rib resection and division of subclavius tendon is necessary for definitive decompression and should not be
delayed more than several weeks to prevent recurrence
- pharmaco-mechanical thrombolysis can improve symptoms between time of presentation and surgical
reconstruction
- subclavian vein stents have high incidence of thrombosis, fracture, deformation and should be avoided
Neurogenic thoracic outlet syndrome
most common form of TOS (95%)
most common site of compression is at scalene triangle
- area where brachial plexus's 5 roots (C5-T1) become 3 trunks
Thoracic outlet decompression
transaxillary approach
- better visualization for rib resection
- not suitable for cases that require vascular reconstruction
- may be more challenging in context of cervical rib because brachial plexus is usually displaced anteriorly
supraclavicular approach
- allows for identification of the cause of compression, resection of first and cervical ribs, and vascular
reconstruction (ie, can get proximal control)
Axillary artery hematoma
artery runs with brachial plexus in axillary sheath and bleeding (ie, from access site) can result in hematoma tracking
down sheath
hematoma may be unimpressive on physical exam and pulses likely intact
first finding is usually sensory deficit or paresthesias that can rapidly progress to motor loss
diagnostic tests will likely delay treatment
tx urgent surgical decompression
Quadrilateral space syndrome
chronic arterial compression with overhand motion in athletes (pitchers, volleyball players)
posterior humeral circumflex artery and axillary nerve run through quadrilateral space -- teres minor (superior),
humeral shaft (lateral), teres major (inferior), long head of triceps (medial)
can lead to aneurysm or occlusion
Brachial sheath hematoma (ie, trauma/GSW)
neurologic sx may be secondary to ischemia or nerve compression
even small, non-palpable brachial sheath hematomas may cause significant neurologic complications and may be
difficult to detect with imaging
management
- exploration with interposition vein graft
- covered stent placement may be suboptimal option depending on length of defect, location in brachial artery
(which is dynamic during arm motion, relatively small in diameter, prone to spasm), and inability to perform
simultaneous hematoma evacuation
- consider fasciotomy for extensive injuries, crush injuries, or severe/prolonged ischemia
Radial artery access complications
Allen test performed prior to determine risk of digital ischemia if occlusion occurs
thrombosis (occurs in 5-10%)
- risk with sheath size
UPPER EXTREMITIY
- tx short-term anticoagulation (ie, 4 weeks)
stenosis (occurs in 25%)
- most resolve with time
Hypothenar hammer syndrome / ulnar artery aneurysm
repeated blunt trauma to hypothenar part of hand superficial branch of ulnar artery compressed against hamate
may develop ulnar aneurysm, usually distal to pisiform bone at wrist
angiogram shows artery with corkscrew appearance due to intraluminal thrombus
management
- repair with reversed vein graft (branch of GSV or foot vein give reasonable size match)
- thrombolysis first if there is significant digital ischemia from aneurysm thrombosis or embolization
Thromboangiitis obliterans (Buerger disease)
chronic, non-atherosclerotic arteritis characterized by relapsing episodes of distal extremity ischemia
classically presents as digital gangrene in young male smoker
almost always affects more than 1 extremity, otherwise consider other diagnoses
imaging shows thrombosis of small and medium-sized arteries (often distal to brachial and popliteal arteries) with
corkscrew-shaped collaterals secondary to hypertrophied vasa vasorum
management
- smoking cessation is most important intervention for preventing progression, ulceration, gangrene
- iloprost (prostacyclin) may improve symptoms
Raynaud phenomenon
prevalence of 3-5% in general population
triphasic change in skin color - need at least biphasic change for diagnosis
- ischemia (white) cyanosis (blue) reperfusion (red)
associated diagnoses may be rheumatologic (scleroderma, SLE), hematologic (cryoglobulins, paraneoplastic disorder),
neurologic (carpal tunnel), drug-related (ergotamine)
management
- avoid cold, smoking, aggravating medications (ie, caffeine)
- first line drug tx antiplatelet and low-dose DHP CCBs (ie, nifedipine, amlodipine, felodipine)
- alternatives PDE inhibitors (ie, sildenafil), topical nitrates, ARBs, SSRIs
- avoid βB
look up types of Raynaud and waveforms
Central stenosis / non-malignant SVC obstruction
pt with hx of multiple dialysis catheters presents with facial swelling, HA, dizziness when bending over
endovascular tx is effective over short-term and does not adversely affect future open options
open reconstruction in pts not suitable for or who fail endovascular tx
- straight spiral saphenous vein graft is best conduit
Left innominate vein ligation
occasionally performed for aortic arch exposure or part of mediastinal resection for large tumors
venous drainage develops collaterals from hemi/azygous, internal mammary, lateral thoracic, superficial
thoracoabdominal, vertebral plexus, transverse sinus veins
may develop painless arm swelling most pts can be tx'd conservatively (ie, compression)
Internal mammary artery ligation
UPPER EXTREMITIY
usually ok unless it's needed as inflow for coronary bypass or myocutaneous muscle flap
Thrombolysis for acute DVT
absolute contraindications
– active bleeding
– recent head injury (2 weeks)
– recent spinal surgery ( 3 weeks)
– thrombocytopenia (< 100)
relative contraindication
- pregnancy
EXPOSURES
proximal L common carotid and proximal L subclavian
anterior thoracotomy with partial superior median sternotomy and left supraclavicular incision (ie, trapdoor)
proximal L subclavian
supraclavicular incision
proximal axillary artery
infraclavicular incision
balloon vs. self expanding stents
balloon expanding stents have more radial force and are easier to place precisely (use for any orificial lesions)
self expanding are more malleable, can be better for longer and more tortuous lesions (ie, SFA)
LOWER EXTREMITIY
QUESTIONS 44
Acute limb ischemia
anticoagulation
- unfractionated heparin - initial bolus (100 units/kg ) then continuous gtt (18 units/kg/hr)
- leads to thrombus stabilization, prevents propagation, has vasodilatory effect
Rutherford classification of acute limb ischemia
SVS lower extremity threatened limb classification system ("WIfI")
considers clinical factors of wound, ischemia, foot infection
Acute traumatic limb ischemia
unstable pt with GSW to thigh SFA thrombectomy and shunting
- bypass with contralateral saphenous vein may be optimal but not in unstable patient
- need damage control shunting associated with low thrombosis rate (5%) and amputation rate < 20%
vascular shunts
- most effective in proximal extremity injuries (ie, femoral, popliteal vessels)
- most common complications are thrombosis and distal embolization
Claudication
ABI < 0.9 suggests arterial occlusive disease
differential diagnosis in young patients
- thromboangiitis obliterans
- adventitial cystic disease - classically associated with loss of distal pluses after knee flexion (Ishikawa sign)
- popliteal artery entrapment
- chronic exertional compartment syndrome
- lower extremity trauma
- infectious embolism
- fibromuscular dysplasia
- vasculitis
- middle aortic syndrome
- persistent sciatic artery
External iliac artery endofibrosis
seen in high performance cyclists and other athletes
extreme hip flexion repetitive trauma to EIA secondary to iliopsoas muscle or inguinal ligament in setting of high
blood flow, as well as mechanical stress from bend on artery
tx inguinal ligament release and EIA patch angioplasty or interposition graft
Post-catheterization pseudoaneurysm
risk factors include larger sheaths size, punctures either proximal or distal to CFA, females, anticoagulation
management
LOWER EXTREMITIY
- asymptomatic and < 2 cm conservative management
- symptomatic and/or > 2 cm US-guided manual compression or thrombin injection
- open repair if there is overlying skin changes or unfavorable neck (ie, short, wide neck)
Infected femoral pseudoaneurysm in drug abuser
tx complete excision and debridement
- in situ reconstruction carries a high risk of blowout or reinfection
Persistent sciatic artery (PSA)
congenital vascular anomaly resulting in atresia of SFA
- "complete" type (figure) PSA continues into popliteal artery, serves as principle blood supply to lower
extremity, and associated with hypoplastic CFA and SFA which ends at adductor canal
- "incomplete" type PSA is hypoplastic and is a continuation of hypogastric, courses
through sciatic foramen into thigh, SFA remains principal supply to lower extremity
PSA
prone to atherosclerosis, aneurysmal degeneration, thromboembolism, sciatic
neuropathy from nerve compression
pulsatile buttock mass on physical exam
Popliteal artery aneurysm
main risk is thrombosis and limb loss, although rupture is also possible
should be repaired, even when small, if the lumen has a thrombus burden of > 50%
tx open or endo repair are both reasonable
- endovascular repair has shown lower complication rates and shorter hospital stay
» tibial runoff is the most important determinant of stent graft patency
» seal neck of 15 mm is adequate
» vessel calcification and geniculate branches are not a contraindication
Popliteal entrapment
more common in younger, active patients
Blunt popliteal artery injury
posterior knee dislocation blunt shear force of vessel dissection and disruption of intima and media
treatment
LOWER EXTREMITIY
- if pulse discrepancy angiography and repair
- normal pulses serial pulse exam and external fixation
Tibial aneurysm
may be secondary to vascular type Elher-Danlos
pt should undergo cardiac evaluation due to risk for coronary disease at younger age
Diabetic foot ulcers
pathophysiological mechanisms are primarily neuropathic
- sensory neuropathy of type A myelinated α-fibers loss of proprioception protection
- autonomic neuropathy (or sympathetic dysfunction) shunting of blood from skin and loss of oil and sweat gland
function dry skin risk for cracks and fissures
management
- IV antibiotics and debridement if acutely infected
- revascularization to wound angiosome may be beneficial for limb-related outcomes
» ie, if ulcer at first metatarsal bypass to PT (medial plantar branch of PT supplies dorsum of 1st metatarsal)
Cholesterol embolization (aka Blue toe) syndrome
diffuse microscopic arteriolar occlusion by showers of cholesterol emboli induced by endovascular manipulation
- most likely from aortic source
- can see cholesterol crystals on biopsy
present painful blue toes ± new onset renal failure
best imaging test is CTA C/A/P
Compartment syndrome
compartments
- anterior …
- lateral superficial peroneal nerve
- superficial posterior soleus muscle
- deep posterior tibial nerve , PT artery, flexor hallicus longus
decision to perform fasciotomies based on clinical criteria (ie, tense compartments with motor or nerve dysfunction)
additional indications
- prolonged ischemia > 6 hours - most commonly accepted indication
- pts who cannot be reliably examined following reperfusion (ie, intubated sedated pt)
- combined arterial and venous injuries necessitating operative repair
- reperfusion associated with arterial reconstruction
- concomitant crush injuries or significant fractures
compartment pressures
- dynamic compartment pressures = mean difference between arterial pressure and intracompartmental pressure
- fasciotomy warranted if difference between intracompartmental pressure and MAP is < 40 mmHg
Gluteal compartment syndrome
gluteal region has 3 compartments that require assessment
- gluteus maximus - includes inferior gluteal artery and nerve
- medius/minimus - includes superior gluteal artery and nerve
- tensor fascia lata
normal compartment pressures are 13-14 mmHg, consider decompression if > 30
tx decompression via prone position through expansile-type Kocher-Langenbeck incision
Pathology
intimal fibroplasia type of FMD intimal collagen deposition and disruption of internal elastic lamina
adventitial cystic disease mucin-containing cystic structures
LOWER EXTREMITIY
- can affect pop, iliac, radial, ulnar arteries and peripheral veins
medial calcific sclerosis dystrophic calcification
- seen in pts with DM and renal failure
Ehler-Danlos syndrome disorganized collagen fibers and rare collagen bundles
Bypass conduits
autogenous vein
prosthetic (ie, polytetrafluoroethylene)
- same intermediate (ie, 2 yr) patency rate as autogenous saphenous vein when used for above knee bypasses
- patency significantly when sewn to below knee targets
cryopreserved vein
- worse patency compared to autogenous vein
Catheter-directed thrombolysis
can be used to treat emboli but may need longer infusion times and use of adjunctive mechanical thrombectomy
absolute contraindications
- recent hemorrhage (ie, GI bleed)
Endovascular stents
covered stents
- allow for immediate restoration of arterial flow in clinical scenarios where thrombolysis may be contraindicated
(ie, recent surgery or hemorrhage)
bare metal stents
- not used for acute and subacute thrombus due to risk for "cheese-grating" with subsequent distal embolization
self-expanding
- more malleable, can be better for longer and more tortuous lesions (ie, SFA)
- use in areas of repetitive motion (ie, distal external iliac)
balloon expanding
- have more radial force and are easier to place precisely (use for any orificial lesions)
Endovascular balloons
plain balloon
drug-coated
- coated with an excipient and paclitaxel
» excipient - aids in transfer of drug from balloon to arterial wall
» paclitaxel
› diffuses through intima to media and adventitia
› has antiproliferative effect on smooth muscle cells primary mechanism for preventing restenosis
- RCTs show superior 1° patency compared to plain balloons when treating SFA lesions
Atherectomy
RCTs show rate of bailout stenting for residual stenosis or dissection compared to PTA with selective stenting
DIALYSIS ACCESS
End stage renal disease
treatment options - AV fistula, PTFE graft, venous catheter, PD catheter, transplant
General considerations
adequate flow rates
minimal complications
long-term patency
acceptable cosmesis
Pre-op considerations
eval site for patency and signs of infection
restrict arm -- no BP or PIVs
Access types
AV fistula
– better 1° and 2° patency than graft
– criticisms of fistula first
- number of non-maturation
- number of remedial procedures (thus cost)
- catheter-dependence time
– maturation (vein arterialization and increase in flow) - median 98 days
AV graft
– large surface area, easy cannulation, preferred by HD techs
– complications
– "maturation" time
– amendable to remediation tx if thrombosis or failure
– unlimited supply
Operative management
Post-operative care and follow up
DIALYSIS ACCESS
VESAP
Anatomy
cephalic + median cubital + basilic vv. H
– cephalic vein (lateral forearm) communicates with median cubital vein in antecubital fossa
– median cubital vein drains into basilic vein (medial forearm/arm)
General considerations
patency
– autogenous > prosthetic
– larger inflow artery > smaller
– larger outflow vein > smaller
overall cost per patient-yr at risk
– tunneled catheter < AVF < AVG
access as far distally on non-dominant arm if possible
Pre-op evaluation
vein mapping
– prospective RCT showed initial failure rate but no difference in 1° patency at 1 yr
– not needed if pt has adequate visible superficial veins and no signs of central venous stenosis
UE segmental pressures and pulse volume recordings (PVRs) - if any abnormality on pulse exam
arteriography
– allows for identification and possible intervention on arterial inflow stenosis
– in pre-HD pts, risk of contrast may be prohibitive (use segmental pressures and PVRs instead)
AV fistula
requires outflow vein ≥ 3 mm
benefits of regional anesthesia (ie, brachial plexus block)
– vasodilation of artery and vein flow in fistula
- lasts up to 8 weeks post-op
- allows for use of more distal vein
- shown to 1° patency and function at 3 months
– improvement in reported pain control - motor and sensory blockade lasts 6-12 hours
maturation criteria - rule of 6s
– flow rate 600 cc/min
– vein diameter 6 mm
– access depth 6 mm below skin
maturation failure
– inflow artery < 2 mm consistently shown to be associated with failure
– diabetes and female gender associated with failure rates of wrist AVFs
– basilic transposition in obese pts have failure rate
access techniques …
– buttonhole … hematoma, bacteremia/abscess
– rope-ladder …
AV graft
requires outflow vein ≥ 4 mm but does not need to be anatomically accessible
early cannulation grafts (Acuseal, Flixene, Vectra)
- allow for expedited access and time of catheter dependence
- sealing properties of layered graft minimize bleeding at suture line and cannulation holes
- most can be used within 24 hours
- important in pts who are immunosuppressed and have had previous line infections
- may have risk for ischemic steal (Accuseal specifically)
- similar long-term patency as PTFE
DIALYSIS ACCESS
surveillance
- routine duplex every 3-4 months detection of graft stenosis but also invasive interventions with
indeterminate impact on patency
Complications
access dysfunction
– clinical features include absent thrill, discontinuous bruit, edema distal to access, difficult cannulation,
inability to reach target flow, prolonged bleeding, discordance between delivered and prescribed HD dose
(Kt/V)
– other measures of surveillance
- static venous pressures (measured in HD machine)
- access flow measurements
flow measurements performed with US dilution which determine access blood flow after
injecting saline through reversed-line HD circuit
rate < 600 cc/min or > 25% below baseline suggest venous stenosis
early access failure (within 30 days of surgery)
– in absence of technical failure (ie, twisted or stenotic anastomosis), most commonly due to inadequate
venous outflow, which may be secondary to inadequate vein caliber or central venous stenosis
– less common causes included poor arterial inflow, anastomotic stenosis, or hypercoagulable state
early thrombosis
– associated with female gender, forearm AVF, small arterial size, outflow vein 2-3 mm, protamine use
– diabetes and non-compliant arteries have lower frequency of early thrombosis
– short-term antiplatelet use in peri-op period associated with rates of early thrombosis
late thrombosis
– most commonly due to intimal hyperplasia of venous outflow tract
– second most common cause is central venous stenosis
arterial steal hand ischemia
– strategies to risk
- use axillary artery inflow in high-risk pts
- create radiocephalic fistula when feasible
- proximal radial artery instead of brachial for inflow when possible
- limit size of anastomosis if brachial inflow is necessary
- tapered grafts to limit inflow have mixed results
– best test for dx digital plethysmography with and without fistula compression
– management
- evaluate with arteriogram to identify any proximal arterial stenosis
- severe, immediate immediate ligation of AVF
- less severe various techniques to relieve steal symptoms
banding of fistula outflow tract (to resistance in fistula)
proximalization of arterial inflow (PAI)
revision using distal inflow (RUDI)
distal revascularization and interval ligation (DRIL)
- ligation of the arterial outflow tract just distal to arterial anastomosis followed by
bypass from artery proximal to anastomosis to artery distal to area of ligation
- effective in treating ischemic pain and tissue loss but less effective for neurologic
deficits that have already occurred
high output heart failure
– occurs when R-side circulatory volume reduces overall L-side volume HR and stroke volume to
compensate cardiac output ventricular hypertrophy and eventually heart failure
– risk factors include underlying cardiac dz, anemia, upper arm AVF (vs. forearm), males, and upper arm fistula
in same arm a previously functioning forearm fistula
– TTE usually shows LV dilation and pHTN
– management
DIALYSIS ACCESS
- fistula banding - constricts inflow and access volume
banding inflow artery is not recommended
- surgical ligation may be needed if no response to banding
- re-siting AV anastomosis to smaller, distal artery
inotropes (ie, digoxin) are not effective
pseudoaneurysm
– defects in vessel wall due to trauma of repeated punctures (AVG > AVF)
– commonly occurs in pairs due to arterial and venous punctures with each session
– dx is clinical but can be confirmed with duplex ("yin-yang sign" on color-flow is created by turbulent flow)
– intervention indicated if growing or ulcerated
- open tx bypass around involved portion and replace with either transposed vein or prosthetic
- excision of aneurysmal areas is rarely required
- can continue HD by accessing uninvolved part
- can use endovascular covered stent grafts but may incidence of future complications at access site
ischemic monomelic neuropathy
– rare complication that requires prompt dx to avoid permanent neurologic injury
– almost exclusively in diabetics, immediately after creation of a brachiocephalic or antecubital AVF/AVG
– characterized by acute pain and weakness in forearm and hand muscles, wrist drop, often with sensory loss
– underlying cause is sudden diversion of blood supply to nerves of forearm and hand with resulting injury to
nerve fibers
– untx'd pts develop claw-hand deformity with loss of function and severe neuropathic pain
– tx immediate ligation of AVF
seroma (AVG)
– sterile, ultrafiltered serum surrounded by fibrous pseudocapsule
– affects 2-4% of pts with AVG
– caused by failure of synthetic graft to become encapsulated
– may lead to infection, skin necrosis, graft thrombosis, loss of graft puncture area
– tx removal of seroma and replacement of the involved portion of graft
- continued serial aspiration and closed suction drainage are assoc'd with risk for infection
Central venous stenosis
commonly in subclavian vein in pt with hx of prior catheters
secondary to intimal hyperplasia
can be asymptomatic with only dialysis venous pressures, or symptomatic with bleeding at puncture site,
extremity edema, varicosities, pigmentation, venous ulceration
management
– angioplasty can be successful but with limited durability
– bare metal or covered stents have not been proven to durability but can used if angioplasty alone is
suboptimal or if there is recurrent stenosis
– open methods (ie, subclavian to IJ bypass, jugular turndown) used when endovascular tx fails
– ligation of access only as a last resort
HeRO graft
used in pts with central venous stenosis/occlusion (provided it can be crossed endovascularly)
proximal anastomosis to an artery or existing HD access, device placed in R atrium for direct outflow
- allows for bypass of venous occlusion while maintaining access without bridging with tunneled catheter
lower infection rate compared to tunneled catheter
contraindications
- EF < 20%
- SBP < 100
- brachial a. < 3 mm
- active infection
DIALYSIS ACCESS
Short-term catheters
double lumen non-cuffed catheters that can be placed at bedside
right IJ is preferred with catheter tip at SVC just above RA (best flow rates)
– subclavian has risk for stenosis
– femoral has risk for infection
DIALYSIS ACCESS
RUTHERFORD
General considerations
Dialysis catheters
Complex access
Failing and thrombosed access
Nonthrombotic complications
VENOUS & LYMPHATIC
Pictures
VENOUS & LYMPHATIC
VESAP
Questions 37, 42 & 43 re: AVF creation for long-term patency
Anatomy
superficial venous system
- greater saphenous vein (GSV) ***
- GSV exits fascia in proximal thigh becomes superficial accessory GSV (aka vena saphena magna accessoria
superficialis)
sural nerve lateral ankle, foot, heel sensation
» adjacent to small saphenous vein (SSV) (see US image below)
SSV and sural nerve
Pulmonary embolus
massive PE with hemodynamic instability and R heart failure systemic thrombolysis over catheter directed lysis
Retroperitoneal sarcoma
most common caval tumors
often require en bloc resection of IVC
- < 50% patch angioplasty repair with autogenous vein or bovine pericardium
- > 50% ringed PTFE favored to provide radial force that resists visceral compression, 90% 5 yr patency
Cattell-Braasch maneuver
medial rotation of R colon, hepatic flexure, duodenum exposes infrarenal IVC
Chronic IVC occlusion
ranges from asymptomatic to severe BLE edema, hyperpigmentation, ulcers
tx endovascular recanalization with iliofemoral stenting
- compression alone does not tx underlying cause
- angioplasty alone is not durable
- open reconstruction with femorocaval bypass is morbid
VENOUS & LYMPHATIC
Nutcracker syndrome
compression of L renal vein as it passes between SMA and aorta
presents with abdominal pain, pelvic congestion, hematuria, proteinuria, orthostatic intolerance
L renal vein tributaries include L gonadal v, L ureteral v, capsular vv, lumbar vv, suprarenal v, inferior phrenic v
Pelvic congestion syndrome (PCS)
chronic pelvic pain, dyspareunia, urinary urgency, painful LE varicose veins (non-saphenous vein reflux)
transabdominal ultrasound is most complete initial imaging work up
- can confirm pelvic varicosities, measure parauterine and ovarian vein diameters and reflux, eval for left renal and
iliac vein compression, and rule out ovarian, pelvic, iliac vein reflux
- transvaginal ultrasound is good for pelvic pathology but doesn't eval L renal vein compression or ovarian v reflux
- CT venogram doesn't allow for real time assessment of ovarian vein reflux
May Thurner syndrome
compression of L CIV between R CIA and L5 body chronic venous insufficiency of LLE
venous duplex shows turbulence (mosaic appearance), abnormal Doppler signal, continuous flow with valsalva,
sluggish flow with no spontaneous variation, poor augmentation, absent respiratory variation
- most Sn duplex criterion for stenosis > 50% is a post-stenotic to pre-stenotic peak vein velocity ratio of 2.5
tx stent
Iliofemoral DVT
management
- controversial
» ATTRACT trial showed no significant difference in rate of post-thrombotic syndrome with catheter-directed
thrombolysis vs. anticoagulation alone
» CaVenT trial showed significant rate of post-thrombotic syndrome after catheter-directed thrombolysis
» CHEST guidelines (grade 2C) anticoagulation alone
- patency after open surgical thrombectomy is improved by AV fistula creation
Common femoral vein transection
repair with lateral venorrhaphy, has better patency than bypass or interposition graft
venous ligation if pt is unstable, but has high incidence of PE
creation of AVF does NOT long-term patency in this situation
Acute DVT
management
- mechanical prophylaxis serum levels of tPA
- CHEST guidelines anticoagulation alone (over catheter directed thrombolysis) using LMWH over NOACs or vit K
antagonists
VENOUS & LYMPHATIC
- pts with cancer and active malignancy LMWH for first 3 months (ie, dalteparin , enoxaparin)
- catheter directed thrombolysis risk and severity of post-thrombotic syndrome compared to anticoagulation
alone
risk of recurrence highest in pts with active malignancy
- provoked DVT 1% at 1 yr, 3% at 5 yrs
- non-surgical provocation 5% at 1 yr, 15% at 3 yrs
- unprovoked DVT 10% at 1 yr
- active malignancy 15% at 1 yr
Distal (calf) DVT
CHEST guidelines suggest treating with anticoagulation, unless high risk for bleeding then follow up with US in 2 w
Varicose veins
most common manifestation of primary chronic venous insufficiency
Venous ulcers
most important aspect of tx is compression
superficial system should be tx'd in pts with pathologic GSV reflux
CEAP classification
VENOUS & LYMPHATIC
Venous insufficiency treatment
thermal ablation (ie, laser, RFA) is preferred
foam, glue, and mechanical-chemical txs can also be used
ligation and stripping can be done but more invasive
perforator ablation only if pathologic, ie > 3.5 mm
Endovenous radiofrequency ablation (RFA)
RFA energy causes ablation of endothelium thrombus formation collagen contraction vein contraction
no absolute contraindications; relative contraindications include:
- active superficial venous thrombosis is main contraindication
- superficial vein in close proximity to skin may cause burning
- GSV < 2 mm (risk of perforation) or > 15 mm (lower efficacy)
most common recurrence pattern is anterior accessory saphenous vein (AASV) incompetence
Cyanoacrylate embolization (CAE)
non-inferior to RFA
ecchymosis compared to RFA
VENOUS & LYMPHATIC
Endovenous heat-induced thrombus (EHIT)
can occur after RFA or endovenous laser ablation (ELA) of GSV
risk factors
- large diameter GSV, age, D-dimer at time of tx
classification based on extent of thrombus into deep venous system and risk of propagation
- level 1 closure with thrombus below level of epigastric vein (normal finding after thermal ablation)
- level 2 closure with thrombus extension flush with orifice of epigastric vein (may be normal)
- level 3 closure with thrombus extension flush with SFJ
- level 4 closure with thrombus bulging into CFV
- level 5 closure with proximal thrombus extension adherent to adjacent wall of CVF past SFJ
- level 6 closure with significant proximal thrombus extension in CFV
management
- level 3 most don't need treatment, only if high thrombotic risk
- level 4-5 anticoagulation until thrombus retracts to level 3
- level 6 tx as a provoked DVT with anticoagulation x3 months
A different EHIT classification?? (#37)
I thrombosis to level of SFJ
II extension into deep system, cross-sectional area < 50%
III extension into deep system, cross-sectional area > 50%
IV occlusion of femoral or popliteal vv.
anticoagulate EHIT III and IV
LYMPHEDEMA
Lymphedema
classification based on etiology
- primary (cryptogenic)
» congenital - onset before age 1
› usually sporadic but can be secondary to Milroy disease (autosomal dominant VEGFR-3 mutation),
Noonan syndrome (PTPN11) mutation), Turner syndrome, Klinefelter syndrome, trisomy 21
» praecox - onset age 1-35
» tarda - onset after age 35
- secondary (acquired)
differences from venous insufficiency
- venous edema does not affect toes and usually does not produce a positive Stemmer sign (thicken skin fold at
base of toe)
management of severe unilateral lymphedema
- intensive reduction phase with manual lymphatic drainage (MLD), short-stretch bandaging, exercise, skin care
- maintenance phase with compression wraps, self-MLD, low pressure sequential pneumatic compression
- elastic compression is ineffective if severe
Venous vs. arteriovenous malformation
venous malformation may have D-dimer due to localized coagulopathy
RADIATION SAFETY
VESAP
Effective dose
calculation of radiation exposure that reflects the risk of cancer formation
Radiation exposure exponentially with distance 1/d2
Geometric magnification
positioning patient closer to XR tube and farther from ii
tube current, scatter, skin entrance dose
Bi-planar imaging
total dosage if used for all imaging rather than only when necessary
Last image hold
required by FDA for all fluoro machines
when operator removes foot from pedal, last image stays on screen reduces fluoro time
Deterministic effect
tissue reaction that occurs at a specific threshold dose of exposure
skin injury is the most common
Stochastic effect
occurs with no specific threshold dose
probability increases with increasing dose
ie, cancer, heritable changes in reproductive cells
effective dose is the variable that most accurately predicts stochastic risk
Radiation induced skin injury
deterministic effect of XR exposure
2 Gray transient erythema, develops within several hours to 2 weeks after exposure
7 Gray permanent epilation (hair loss), dyspigmentation, edema, several weeks after exposure
10 Gray dermal atrophy and telangiectasia, late consequence, rarely before 1 yr after exposure
> 10 Gray skin ulceration
Radiation induced cataracts
caused by deterministic and non-deterministic effects
appear on posterior capsule of lens (different than typical cataracts)
maximal protection from a single method is via ceiling mounted Plexiglas shield (not lead glasses)
Radiation and pregnancy
nature and extent of deterministic effects on pregnancy depends on dose and trimester
- 100 mGy can be fatal to embryo during first trimester
- 50 mGy is threshold for concern for congenital malformations per Ob/Gyn guidelines
pregnant operators lead should be 0.5-1 mm, stand 6 feet away, wear fetal dose badge under lead
CRITICAL CARE - UNEDITED IMPORT
CARDIOVASCULAR
Preload = LV end-diastolic length linearly related to LVEDV and filling pressure NORMAL
Afterload = SVR CO (L/min) 4-8
MAP = CO x SVR CI (L/min) 2.5-4
Cardiac index = CO/BSA SVR 800-1400
Stroke volume = LVEDV - SLVESV determined by LVEDV, contractility, afterload PCWP 11 ± 4
Arterial O2 content (CaO2) = Hb x 1.24 x O2 sat + (PO2 x 0.003) CVP 7 ±2
O2 delivery = CO x CaO2 x 10 PAP 25/10 ± 5
O2 consumption (VO2) = CO x (CaO2 - CvO2) normal delivery-to-consumption ratio is 5:1 SvO2 75 ± 5
Causes of right shift on O2-Hb dissociation curve (O2 unloading)
temp, ATP production, 2,3-DPG production, pH
Swan-Ganz
should be placed in zone III (lower lung)
relative c/i prior pneumonectomy, LBBB
hemoptysis after flushing Swan PEEP to tamponade the pulmonary artery bleed, mainstem intubate non-affected side, can try Fogarty
balloon down mainstem of affected side, may need thoracotomy and lobectomy
PVR (pulmonary vascular resistance) can only be measured by Swan (not by echo)
distance to wedge
- R SCV 45 cm
- R IJ 50 cm
- L SCV 55 cm
- L IJ 60 cm
SvO2 (venous blood saturation), get from Swan
SvO2 with shunting or extraction (ie, sepsis, cirrhosis, cyanide, hyperbaric O2, hypothermia, paralysis, coma, sedation)
SvO2 with shunting or extraction (ie, hypoxemia, CO, malignant hyperthermia)
blood with the lowest SvO2 coronary sinus (30%)
PCWP = ***
may be thrown off by pHTN, aortic regurg, mitral stenosis, PEEP, poor LV compliance
A-a gradient
Intra-aortic balloon pump (IABP)
inflates on T wave (diastole); deflates on P wave (systole)
aortic regurg is a c/i to IABP
place tip of catheter just distal to L subclavian 1-2 cm below the top of the arch
used for cardiogenic shock (ie, after CABG, MI) or in pts with refractory angina as bridge to revascularization
deflates during ventricular systole afterload
inflates during ventricular diastole diastolic BP diastolic coronary perfusion
Pacemakers
LVAD
CRITICAL CARE - UNEDITED IMPORT
Pulse
Ox
CRITICAL CARE - UNEDITED IMPORT
ECMO
closed circuit, no venous reservoir (vs. cardiopulmonary bypass)
basically some kind of VAD with oxygenator
veno-venous
- use for pulmonary failure, must be reversible (ie, PNA, ARDS) or bridge to transplant
veno-arterial
- use for cardiogenic shock, post-pump
cannulation
- inflow/outflow are in relation to the pump, not pt
- peripheral cannulation
» ie, femoral v. (inflow) and femoral a. (outflow)
» oxygenated blood reaches heart via retrograde flow, so need R radial A-line for flow monitoring (L-side won't
tell you if you're crossing arch adequately)
» lower extremity needs distal perfusor
- central cannulation
» ie, RA (inflow) and aorta (outflow)
CRITICAL CARE - UNEDITED IMPORT
circuit -- 3 things can be controlled
- flow - controlled by RPMs
» usually 4-6 L/min
- FiO2
» usually leave at 100% but can be turned down if high PaO2
- sweep - controls CO2 exchange
» 0-6, usually at 1-3
» 0 = off, meaning oxygenator is also off
weaning
- ***
complications
- bleeding, coagulopathy, hemolysis
- renal failure - partly due to hemolysis
- loss of limb - distal perfusor tries to compensate for this
troubleshooting
- chatter = suctioning against vessel wall
» either running flow too fast or volume is too low
CRITICAL CARE - UNEDITED IMPORT
CARDIOVASCULAR DRUGS
Receptors
α1 vascular smooth m. constriction, gluconeogenesis, glycogenolysis
α2 venous smooth muscle constriction
β1 myocardial contraction and rate
β2 relaxes bronchial smooth m., relaxes vascular smooth m., insulin, glucagon, renin
DA relax renal and splanchnic smooth m.
SHOCK
***
calcium after massive transfusion hypotension
EMBOLI
***
CO2 embolus
1st - stop insufflation
trendelenburg and L-side down (prevents any more propagation of CO2 into lungs)
ventilate with 100% O2 (CO2 resorbed faster as it comes into equilibrium)
CRITICAL CARE - PHARMACOLOGY
MECHANISM EFFECT
DRUG USE SIDE EFFECT / CONTRAINDICATIONS
α1 α2 β1 β2 DA SVR PVR contract HR
septic or cardiogenic shock
phenylephrine
norepinephrine
epinephrine
high dose low dose
dopamine
high dose med dose low dose
dobutamine
isoproterenol
vasopressin V1 (smooth m.)
milrinone PDE1 inhibitor
ephedrine catecholamine release
nitroprusside
MISCELLANEOUS
Chlamydia pneumonia bacterium
bug most associated with formation and rupture of atherosclerotic plaques
Trauma exposures
***
Reperfusion syndrome hyperkalemia, hypocalcemia, metabolic acidosis
Nutrition
respiratory quotient for fatty acids, proteins, carbohydrates, etc.
Persistent sciatic artery
presents with pulsatile buttock mass, no popliteal pulse, palpable pedal pulse
originates from internal iliac, usually ends at popliteal
needs to be treated due to risk for aneurysmal degeneration