Vascular (surgical shorts) Flashcards

1
Q

Femoral vein anatomy

A
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2
Q

Femoral artery anatomy

A
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3
Q

6/7 (0-6) stages of CEAP classification

A

Clinical-Etiology-Anatomy-Pathophysiology

•Patients in finals almost always C4a at a minimum

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4
Q

What is lipodermatosclerosis

A

Lipodermatosclerosis: red blood cells stagnate, extravasate, consumed by inflammatory cells. Tissue fibrosis and atrophy in ascending pattern (where most venous pooling is)

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5
Q

NICE Guidelines: Venous Disease.
High Yield.

A

Summary:

  • When to refer: symptomatic disease, (skin changes/venous ulcer) CEAP 4a onwards, superficial vein thrombosis
  • Ultrasound Duplex: confirm disease, quantify reflux, plan treatment

Management: conservative, surgical

  • Conservative: weight loss, compression bandages & alginate dressing for venous ulcers, do not routinely offer TEDS,
  • Surgical in order:
  1. radiofrequency/laser ablation
  2. US foam sclerotherapy
  3. surgery

Complications of varicose veins:

  • DVT, skin changes, leg ulcers, bleeding, thrombophlebitis
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6
Q

General approach to scar description

3 points

A

Sentence 1: general, detailed description of scar

Sentence 2: what is the likely name of the scar OR atypical?

Sentence 3: justification of your answer/possible indications for the scar: say what’s common and what anatomically significant areas lie beneath

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7
Q

Describe scar

A

5 discrete scars for CABG, saphenous vein harvesting.

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8
Q

Describe the scar

and then…

•‘I note a 12-15 cm well healed, linear scar on the medial aspect of this gentleman’s medial left thigh and a further 7-10 cm well healed, linear scar on the medial aspect of this gentleman’s medial left calf….

A
  • 20 cm linear recent scar extending from the top of the manubrium to the bottom of the sternum
  • Consistent with a midline sternotomy
  • I note two 2-3 cm transverse port site scars located inferolateral to the main scar.
  • Bruising, clips and appearance of the scar suggest recent surgery.

‘I note a 12-15 cm well healed, linear scar on the medial aspect of this gentleman’s medial left thigh and a further 7-10 cm well healed, linear scar on the medial aspect of this gentleman’s medial left calf….

(1) Coronary Artery Bypass Graft. Access to the saphenous vein as I note a median sternotomy scar and no signs of peripheral vascular disease in this gentleman’s left leg
(2) Left sided femoral-distal bypass. Access to the saphenous vein and femoral and popliteal arteries due to left sided disease.
(3) Right sided femoral-distal bypass. Access to the saphenous vein as I note right sided peripheral vascular disease and corresponding scars in this gentleman’s right leg (not visualized here)…
(4) Other rarer indications such as a fasciotomy and associated femoral arterial repair in the context of trauma

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9
Q

What do you see?

A

BKA of right leg with a 15cm horizonal scar in a symmetrical n shape across the stump consistent with a long posterior flap of bergess

Far more commonly seen technique for transtibial (below knee) amputation

Skin and gastrocnemius brought forward to cover shin bones after being divided

alt flap=skewed flap, kingsley robinson MUCH LESS COMMON

Scar line runs is anterior-posterior (antero-lateral to postero-medial)

The muscles of the calf are brought forward in the same way as in the posterior technique but the skin flaps are skewed in relation to the muscle.

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10
Q

suggest 1x

name of scar, anatomy it gives access too, pathology Rx

A

Paramedian Laparotomy: aorta

AAA

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11
Q

suggest 1x

name of scar, anatomy it gives access too, pathology Rx

A

Rooftop: aorta

AAA

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12
Q

suggest 1x

name of scar, anatomy it gives access too, pathology Rx

A

Oblique scar: iliacs. aka Rutherford Morrison.

Think renal transplant as a differential as in renal transplant, iliacs are accessed for grafting to donor kidney.

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13
Q

What do you see

A

Remember carotid endarterectomy scars heal really well and can become almost invisible according the the vascular registrars at CX

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14
Q

Define an aneurysm/pseudoaneurysm

A

A pathological swelling of a vessel to greater than 1.5 times its original diameter, involving all three layers of the vessel wall

Pseudoaneurysms don’t involve all three layers

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15
Q

Management of AAA

UKSAT trail?

  • Elective surgical repair carries XX mortality rate
  • <xx>
    <li>&gt;XX cm have an annual risk of rupture of XX</li>
    </xx>

</xx>

  • Indications for surgery* x3?
    1. 2. 3.
  • EVAR vs open*
  • Complications of AAA (3 categories)*
A

UK Small Aneurysm Trial (UKSAT) & US Aneurysm Detection & Management Study

  • Elective surgical repair carries 5% mortality rate
  • <5.5 cm AAA have annual risk rupture <1%
  • >6 cm have annual risk of rupture of 25%

Indications for surgery

  • AAA diameter > 5.5 cm in men
  • AAA diameter growing > 1 cm per year
  • Symptomatic AAA

EVAR vs open

  • EVAR: significantly lower operative mortality than open surgical repair.
  • No differences were seen in total mortality or aneurysm-related mortality in the long term.

(United Kingdom EVAR Investigators published in New England Journal of Medicine 2010)

Complications of AAA : NAVY & surrounding structures

  • Artery: rupture (&exsanguination), dissection, thrombosis and embolisation from thrombus leading to trash foot.
  • Surrounding structures:
    • (1) fistulation into surrounding organs e.g. colon or vena cava,
    • (2) retroperitoneal fibrosis (inflammation)
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16
Q

What scars will be seen in endovascular aneurysm repair

A
17
Q

RF for PVD

A
  • Modifiable:
    • Smoking
    • dyslipidaemia
    • Obesity (BMI >30)
    • Sedentary (lack of exercise)
    • Poor diet
    • Metabilic syndrome: Diabetes
    • Hypertension
  • Non-modifiable:
    • Age
    • Male
    • Family history of PVD
    • Genotype
    • CKD
18
Q

What are the three stages of Buerger’s test?

A

Stage 1: raise leg, develops pallor at a specific angle

Stage 2: lower leg, delay in return of colour

Stage 3: build up of vasodilator metabolites in ischemic leg causes reactive hyperemia: LEG GOES RED

19
Q

What are the signs of limb ischemia?

A

6 P’s

  • Pale
  • Pulseless
  • Painful
  • Paralysed
  • Paraesthetic
  • Perishingly cold
20
Q

Investigations of peripheral vascular disease

Bedside/bloods/imaging

A

Bedside:

(1) ECG: for ischemic heart disease and its complications
(2) ABPI: calculate relative blood flow/limb ischemia
(3) Doppler: screen for degree of stenosis
(4) BP: hypertension
(5) Urine dip: glycosuria for diabetes

Bloods:

(1) FBC: polycythemia
(2) U&E: renal failure if giving contrast (e.g. CT aortogram)
(3) Plasma glucose & BM: diabetes
(4) Group & Save, Cross Match: for surgery
(5) Clotting: to assess for safety for anticoagulant therapy

Imaging:

(1) Ultrasound duplex: degree of stenosis
(2) CT aortogram: reconstruct vessels in 3D
(3) Digital subtraction angiogram: location of stenosis, presence of collateral blood supply

21
Q

Significance of ABPS (x5 categories)

A

>1.2 = calcification arteries, severe PVD

  1. 9-1.2 = normal/acceptable range
  2. 8-0.9 = some arterial disease, manage risk factors
  3. 5-0.8 = moderate arterial disease. Routine specialist referral.

<0.5 = severe arterial disease. Urgent specialist referral.

22
Q

Management of PVD

conservative/med/surg

A

Conservative: diet, exercise program, smoking, diabetic specialist nurse, podiatrist for foot care

Medical:

  • Aspirin 75 mg
  • ACD treatment hypertension
  • Statins
  • Optimise insulin/oral hypoglycemics

Surgical:

  • Endovascular: stents/grafts
  • Endarterectomy
  • Reconstructive surgery: anatomical or extra-anatomical bypasses
  • Amputation
23
Q

Types of amputations (in finals x6)

A

Digital: seen in finals, often auto-infarcted

Trans-metatarsal: never documented as seen in finals

Above ankle: never documented as seen in finals

Below Knee: seen in finals

Above Knee: seen in finals

Hindquarter: never documented as seen in finals

24
Q

Q: What is Leriche’s Syndrome?

A

Aorto-iliac occlusive disease: blockage of aorta as it transitions into iliacs

Triad of:

  1. Claudication (buttock/thigh)
  2. Erectile dysfunction
  3. Absent or decreased femoral pulses
25
Q

Treatment of leiche’s syndrome (x3)

A
  • ‘kissing’ balloon angioplasty +/- stent (two baloon, reduce zone of plaque shift)
  • Aorto-iliac bypass graft
  • Axillo-bifemoral bypass and femoral-femoral bypass
26
Q

Q: What is Huanman’s disease?

A

Subclavian steal syndrome

Retrograde (reversed) blood flow in vertebral or internal thoracic artery due to proximal stenosis and/or occlusion of subclavian artery

The arm is supplied with retrograde blood flow down the vertebral artery at the expense of the vertebrobasilar circulation

27
Q

Q: What is Klippel-Treaunay Syndrome?

A

Rare congenital condition where blood vessels and/or lymph vessels are malformed

Triad of:

  1. Port-wine stain
  2. Venous & lymphatic malformation (incl. varicose veins)
  3. Soft-tissue hypertrophy of affected limb
28
Q

Q: In renal failure, why do so many patients have aortic stenosis and peripheral vascular disease?

A

Often hypertensives/diabetics

Chronic hyperphosphatemia leads to calcification of vessels and valves

29
Q

Define:

pathophys

Symptoms:

special tests:

causes:

A

Varicose veins: ‘Dilated, tortuous veins in the distribution of the superficial venous system’

Pathophys: failure of valves results in back flow from the deep to superficial circulation

Symptoms: Pain, heaviness, cramping, tingling, bleeding, itching, swelling

Special tests: torniquet and abdo exam

Causes:

  • Primary
    • Prolonged standing
    • Obesity
    • Pregnancy
  • Secondary
    • Valve destruction: DVT, thrombophlebitis
    • Obstruction: pelvic mass DVT
    • Syndromes
30
Q

Name these 7 signs of venous disease

A
31
Q

Arteial vs venous ulcer

A