Describe the etiology of acute aortic occlusion.
Aortic embolism
Referred to as a saddle embolus when located at the aortic bifurcation
Commonly caused by cardiac emboli
Myocardial infarction
Atrial fibrillation
Rheumatic heart disease
Thrombosis of atherosclerotic aorta
Stent or graft occlusion
Aortic dissection
List clinical features.
The clinical features of acute aortic occlusion are due to ischemia of the tissues distal to the level of occlusion.
Occlusion at aortic bifurcation: bilateral acute limb ischemia (most common presentation)
Limb pain
Pallor or cyanosis
Absent pulse
Paresthesia and paralysis
Occlusion above aortic bifurcation
Bilateral acute limb ischemia
Acute abdomen
Acute renal failure
List diagnostics.
CT angiography (confirmatory test)
Investigate the underlying cause
ECG
Echocardiography
Describe the treatment.
Bilateral transfemoral embolectomy
Aortobifemoral bypass
Thrombolysis
Last changed2 years ago