Lower limb aneurysms
Appearance
- Frequently a/w aortic aneurysm
Popliteal aneurysms
[edit | edit source]- Majority are true
- Definition
- 1.5-2cm popliteal artery external diameter
- Risk factors
- Almost all in men
- Smoking
- HTN
- CAD
- Presentations
- Incidental finding
- Pulsatile mass
- Acute limb ischaemia (thrombosis or embolism)
- Chronic claudication or blue toe syndrome
- Natural history
- 30% will develop thromboembolism by three years
- Examination
- Unreliable
- Imaging
- Duplex USS first-line
- Intra-arterial arteriography is gold-standard
- Intervention
- 2cm or greater in diameter
- Any symptomatic
- Surgical bypass
- Proximal and distal ligation
- Bypass with saphenous vein graft
- Thrombectomy or tPA may be required in emergent situation if no suitable outflow vessel
- Endovascular stent graft
- Identical indications
- Long-term results are unknown
- Generally reserved for high-risk patients
Femoral aneurysms
[edit | edit source]- Many false
- Infected femoral pseudoaneurysm
- Most commonly secondary to inadvertent intra-arterial injection of ilicit drugs
- Tender, pulsatile groin mass, cellulitis, open draining punctate skin lesion, signs of systemic infection, sequelae of arterial embolisation or occlusion
- Generally treated by ligating femoral artery and debriding
- Infected femoral pseudoaneurysm
- True aneurysms (arteriosclerotic)
- Commonly a/w aneurysms in other locations (60%)
- Most commonly found in CFA
- Pathogenesis probably relates to inflammation and atherosclerotic degeneration of arterial wall
- Presentation
- Pulsatile mass
- Compressive symptoms - oedema and neuropathy
- Commonly asymptomatic
- Complications less commonly seen than with popliteal
- Diagnosis
- Duplex USS
- CTA is good
- Repair
- >3cm
- Symptomatic
- Complicated
- Rapidly-enlarging
- Emergent repair in acute limb ischaemia due to thromboembolism/rupture
- Surgical repair
- Ligation of inflow and outflow
- Placement of dacron graft from external iliac to distal CFA
- Endovascular repair
- Not currently recommended - frequent hip flexion risks stent fracture
- Pseudoaneurysms after arterial access
- Natural history is unclear, but the vast majority probably close on their own
- Up to a third will require repair
- Small uncomplicated pseudoaneurysms can be followed with serial USS
- >3cm or symptomatic should have treatment
- USS guided compression or thrombin injection
- Open surgical repair if these are failed