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Published byPrudence McDonald Modified over 9 years ago
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Abdominal Vasculature SONO 131 – Lecture #4
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Vascular Anatomy Arterioles Artery Heart Capillaries Venules Vein
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Vascular Anatomy Vessel Walls – Tunica intima – Tunica media – Tunica adventitia – Vasa vasorum Arteries Veins
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Circulatory Anatomy Aorta – Ascending – Arch – Descending – Thoracic – Abdominal
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Anterior Branches Abdominal Aorta Celiac Trunk [Axis] – Common hepatic Hepatic – Right and Left Hepatic Gastroduodenal – Left Gastric – Splenic Left gastroepiploic Short gastric artery Several smaller splenic arteries Great pancreatic artery Hepatic – Left and right hepatic SMA – Inferior pancreatic – Duodenal – Colic – Ileocolic – intestinal IMA – Left colic – Sigmoid – Superior rectal
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Celiac Trunk
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Mesenteric Arteries
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Lateral & Dorsal Branches Lateral – Phrenic Paired arteries – Renal Right & Left – Gonadal Dorsal – Lumbar 4 on each side of aorta
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Renal Arteries
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Sonographic Appearance - Arteries
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Abdominal Artery Summary Abdominal aorta – Celiac Axis Splenic artery Hepatic artery Left gastric artery – SMA Inferior pancreatioduatenal Branches to the colon – Renal Arteries Level L1 – 2 – IMA – Aortic bifurcation Right & Left Common Iliac arteries
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Abdominal Venous System
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Inferior Vena Cava IVC = union of common iliac veins Tributaries to IVC – 3 anterior hepatic veins – 3 lateral Right suprarenal veins Renal veins Right testicular or ovarian vein – 5 lateral abdominal wall veins inferior phrenic + lumbar – 3 veins of origin common iliac + median sacral Drains – Abdominal organs – Abdominal structures – Lower extremities
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Lateral Abdominal Veins Suprarenal Veins – Right & Left Renal Veins – Right & Left Gonadal Veins – Testicular or Ovarian
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Anterior Abdominal Veins Hepatic Veins – Right – Middle – Left
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Portal Venous System Portal Vein Splenic Vein Superior Mesenteric Vein Inferior Mesenteric Vein
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Sonographic Appearance - Veins
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Abdominal Vein - Summary IVC – Right and left common iliac veins – Renal veins – Hepatic veins Portal vein – Splenic & SMV – Right & left portal vein – Porta hepatis – Hepatopetal flow
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Clinical Indications Abdominal Vasculature Imaging Arterial – Suspect aortic aneurysm – Possible ateriovenous fistula – Possible mesenteric ischemia Venous – Leg swelling – Portal hypertension
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Arterial Abnormalities Atherosclerosis - altering of intimal lining of artery by focal accumulation of lipids, complex carbohydrates, blood and blood products, fibrous tissue and or calcium deposits – Cause – No known cause, but progression linked hyperlipidemia, hypertension, cigarette smoking and diabetes mellitus – Signs, Symptoms – None until significant stenosis – Sonographic Appearance – Luminal irregularities, tortuosity, vessel wall calcification
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Aorta Aneurysm True Dilation of artery due to wall weakness Lined by all 3 components of artery wall – Fusiform – Saccular False Lined by outer layers of aortic wall or clot – Dissecting – Pseudoaneurysm
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Aneurysm - Patient Presentation Causes – Atherosclerosis – Trauma – Syphilis – Marfan’s syndrome – Mycotic (Infective) Clinical Features – Abdominal or back pain – Abdominal bruit – Pulsatile abdominal mass – Impaired distal arterial flow
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Dissecting Aortic Aneurysm Type I – Ascending Aorta – Aortic Arch – Most dangerous [spiral] Type II – Marfan’s Syndrome – Ascending Aorta – Aortic Arch Type III – Descending Aorta – Abdominal Aorta
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Aortic Aneurysm
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Ultrasound Presentation
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Endovascular Stent Graft Medtronic Aneurx Cook Zentih Gore Excluder
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Stent Graft Therapy
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Completed Deployment Contralateral Iliac Leg
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Stent Graft Therapy Pre – Stent PlacementPost – Stent Placement
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Stent Graft Therapy Pre – Stent Placement Post – Stent Placement
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Aortic Rupture Risk Factors Diameter Rapid expansion > 0.6 cm / year Family history Hypertension COPD, Current Smoking Shape: Eccentric > Saccular> Fusiform
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Inflammatory Aneurysms Aneurysm enveloped by a dense fibrotic reaction Uncommon – 5 to 20% of aneurysms Uncertain cause Clinically like other aneurysms
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Branch Vessel Aneurysm Splenic – Most common – Usually multiple & occur in main splenic trunk – Life threatening Hepatic – 2 nd most common – Right hepatic arterial branch – Common cause – systemic infection, arteriosclerosis, blunt trauma – Silent or asymptomatic
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Branch Vessel Aneurysm SMA – Rarest [1 in 12,000] – Cause - cystic medial necrosis (mycotic aneurysm) – Intestinal angina & postprandial abdominal pain – General abdominal pain, fever Renal Artery – Low incidence – approximately 20% – Symptoms – palpable mass, hypertension, blood in urine, flank pain
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Vascular Stenosis Vessel lumen narrowed Post stenotic dilatation Increased velocities in area of stenosis Down stream changes – Turbulence – Decreased velocities – Slowed acceleration during systole – Relative elevation of diastolic velocities
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Abdominal Artery Evaluation Doppler flow patterns [Angle corrected @ 60] – Aorta Proximal – high systolic / low diastolic flow Distal – triphasic flow – Celiac Axis Spectral broadening Unchanged after meals – Hepatic Artery Spectral broadening
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Arterial Flow Characteristics
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Renal Artery Stenosis – Associated with uncontrollable hypertension Up to 6% of all hypertensive patients have renal artery stenosis as underlying cause – Decreased glomerular filtration rate – Ischemic renal damage – Atherosclerotic plaque within first 2 cm – Fibromuscular dysplasia – lesions in distal 2/3 of renal artery
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Renal Artery Stenosis
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Mesentery Artery Stenosis Lack of adequate blood supply due to underlying vascular compromise – Mesenteric atherosclerotic disease – Embolic phenomenon Individuals at risk: – Smoking, coronary disease, PAD, chronic renal disease, diabetes mellitus Symptoms: – Progressive postprandial pain, weight loss, change in bowel habits, epigastrc bruit
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Venous Flow Characteristics
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Venous Abnormalities Vena Caval Obstruction Tumors of the IVC Portal Venous Thrombosis Portal Venous Hypertension
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Vena Caval Obstruction IVC site of clot or tumor Greenfield filter – Reduce risk of clot embolizing
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Renal Vein Thrombosis
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Hepatic Venous Abnormalities Budd-Chiari Syndrome – Occlusion of some or all of the hepatic veins or occlusion of IVC – Clinically – Ascites, right upper quadrant pain, hepatomegaly – Sonographically – sluggish flow in IVC & hepatic veins
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Portal Venous Abnormalities Thrombosis Hypertension
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Portosystemic Shunts
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Surgical end-to-side or side-to-side anastomosis of portal vein and IVC or TIPS
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TIPS [Transjugular Interhepatic Portosystemic Shunts]
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Abdominal Vasculature Review
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