b. Right internal jugular vein
a. Dissection (Subclavian artery dissection)
2. Subclavian arterial thrombosis (LAS – thoracic outlet syndrome), young painter, pain. Which is not associated.
a. Dissection (Subclavian artery dissection)
b. Aneurysm (Subclavian artery aneurysm) T – SCA aneurysm
c. Stenosis (Subclavian artery stenosis) T – narrowing of SCA which is positional (abduction)
d. Venous thrombosis (Subclavian vein thrombosis) T – may be occlusive or non-occlusive
e. Arterial mural thrombus (Subclavian artery wall haematoma) T – mural thrombi
StatDx:
• TO consists of interscalene triangle, costoclavicular space, and retropectoralis minor space (subcoracoid tunnel)
o Compression of neural, arterial, or venous structures crossing these tunnels → TOS
o Narrowing of costoclavicular distance may be most important abnormality in symptomatic patients
• Neuropathic TOS: Symptomatology 2° to brachial plexus compression (most symptomatic patients)
o Up to 98% symptomatic patients have plexus compression; minority 2° to arterial or venous impingement
• Vascular TOS: Compression of subclavian vessels o Repetitive arterial trauma → focal stenosis, aneurysm formation, micro-embolization, tissue loss
o Venous compression → SCV thrombosis
a. Exercise Based on AHA/ACC guidelines for peripheral arterial disease 2006:
• Incomplete information – depends on impact on life of disease & comorbidities
• Try supervised claudication exercise therapy & pharmacotherapy first, as well as risk factor modificationTASC-II 2007 guidelines:
Ductus
d. Angioplasty T angioplasty if upper forearm or upper arm; surgery if lower forearm
a. Diastolic dysfunction T abnormal LV stiffness → impaired LV relaxation → poor early diastolic filling
c. Amplitude
e. Aortic dissection peak age 60 years, range 13-87 years (Dahnert)
colour doppler, coding depends on …. what??
Colour displayed within BVs on colour Doppler function of: • Flow velocity • Doppler angle • Presence of aliasing • Colour map utilized • Phase of cardiac cycle
guy with US with thick walled aneurysm with increased ESR. likely??
a. inflammatory aneurysm
b. mycotic aneurysm
inflammatory A = idiopathic inflammatory aortic aneurysm = dense perianeurysmal fibrosis & a thickened aortic wall; accounts for 5-25% of all AAAs; CECT reveals delayed enhancement of soft tissue component; often fusiform
**SCS: more common in younger patients.
B = mycotic aneurysm = infected aortic aneurysm = uncommon (0.06-2.6% of all aneurysms); usually saccular rather than fusiform, with perianeurysmal gas, stranding & fluid +/- vertebral body & psoas involvement
which is not associated with azygous continuation of IVC
a. dextrocardia
b. polysplenia
c. left sided SVC
d. gonadal vein into renal vein
e. hepatic vein into RA
E = F hepatic veins drain directly into RA
**LJS - hepatic veins drain into post-hepatic IVC that is still present - into Ra
**RY - Disagree - Statdx defines as:
- Absent suprarenal & intrahepatic portions of IVC
- Hepatic veins enter directly into right atrium
- Dilated azygos courses upward & drains to SVC
Associations:
- Polysplenia (bilateral hyparterial bronchi, bilobed lungs, midline liver, multiple spleens)
- Congenital heart disease (Atrial septal defect; ventricular septal defect; partially anomalous pulmonary venous return; pulmonary atresia).
- Rare in asplenia
Not sure of right answer for the provided options.
When hemi-azygous continuation a/w left sided IVC, so perhaps this, but sometimes linked together with azygous continuation as same type of anomaly.
Found nothing on gonadal vein
Young woman with hypertension and narrowing of renal ostia. Most likely
a. FMD
b. Wegners
c. PAN
C = T/F = aneurysms at bifurcation points (up to 1cm); renal infarcts; renal/retroperitoneal haemorrhage; however is listed in StatDx as cause of RAS- Maybe real answer was neurofibromatosis (aneurysm; narrowing of proximal RA) or Takayasu
Causes of RAS
• Atherosclerosis (most common cause, 70%; renal artery ostium or proximal 2cm; elderly)
• FMD (25%; mid-distal RA or hilar branches, may be multifocal; young adults; R>L; bilateral in 2/3)
• Congenital/inheritedo Congenital stenosis (childhood)o Neurofibromatosis (children; proximal renal artery)o Ehlers-Danlos or Williams syndrome
• Arteritiso Takayasuo PANo Buerger disease
• Other
o Abdominal aortic coarctation
o Thromboembolico Radiation therapy
o Aortic dissectiono Phaeochromocytoma
o Infrarenal AAA
o Retroperitoneal fibrosis
b. The posterior interventricular artery T
• Refers to the coronary artery that supplies the diaphragmatic surface of LV & the posterior diaphragmatic portion of the interventricular septum – i.e. the dominant artery gives the posterior interventricular (descending) branch (PDA) & the posterolateral branch (PLB)
• Right dominance denotes RCA origin of flow (80-85%)
• Left dominance denotes LCA origin of flow (15-20%) - in this case the PDA & PLB arise from the LCx artery
• Mixed dominance refers to an intermediate pattern, e.g. PDA comes from RCA & PLB comes from LCx; branches of both arteries run in or near the posterior interventricular groove
• Notes:o The LCA almost always supplies a greater volume of tissueo The non-dominant system is usually smaller in calibre c.f. the dominant system
c. Polyarteritis nodosa T kidneys involved in 70-80% with multiple peripheral small aneurysms; CNS involved in 10% (microaneurysms; most common systemic vasculitis to affect the CNS)
2. 50 female presents with headache and hypertension. Angiography reveals multiple renal aneurysms. Which is MOST likely?
a. Aortic dissection F no renal aneurysms
b. Fibromuscular dysplasia F can cause hypertension, can also involve craniocervical arteries, but aneuryms usually post-stenotic, although multiple aneurysms can be seen
c. Polyarteritis nodosa T kidneys involved in 70-80% with multiple peripheral small aneurysms; CNS involved in 10% (microaneurysms; most common systemic vasculitis to affect the CNS)
d. Takayasu’s arteritis predilection for aorta esp. AA & its branches (esp. SCA); RAS may occur; can involve proximal carotid arteries; may cause aneurysms
e. Wegener’s granulomatosis F? typically causes GN, but can cause microaneurysms by its small vessel vasculitis; may cause intracerebral & meningeal granulomas or vasculitis
a. Coarctation of aorta T = get rounded elevated apex; rib notching; prominent ascending aorta
23. Old dude with known coronary artery disease. Ovoid mass with areas of calcification adjacent to left sphenoid sinus. Most likely \:i) Fusiform basilar artery aneurysm ii) Fusiform ICA aneurysm iii) CoW berry aneurysm iv) Micotic MCA aneurysm
ii) Fusiform ICA aneurysm T on MR look for pulsation artifact!
vi) Doppler venous mapping T with aim of doing US/fluoro guided central line insertionv
ii) Post con DSA venous mapping T if planning for new AVFIf in ESRF, further contrast would not be good (e.g. conventional venography) – can use Gadolinium for DSA (although this is against the RANZCR contrast guidelines!). No good evidence as yet for MRA.
Not sure what question means – if put in new AVF, would need to wait until matures anyway. Needs temporary central vein access & would assess with ultrasound in angio suite.If absolutely no access, could plan for peritoneal dialysis.Vascular access society guidelines for pre-op evaluation:
e. MRI brain T if with T1 fat sat neck and MRA neck/brain, although according to RG 08 has quite poor sens/spec for vertebral artery dissection. MRI brain to exclude other causes other than dissection.
4. 30 female left neck pain, 10 hrs of diplopia and dysarthria. Normal non contast CT head and neck. The next investigation should be:
a. Lumbar puncture F
b. Contrast enhanced CT head F would be T if CTA head/neck
c. DSA ?F invasive, but “gold standard”
d. Carotid US F
e. MRI brain T if with T1 fat sat neck and MRA neck/brain, although according to RG 08 has quite poor sens/spec for vertebral artery dissection. MRI brain to exclude other causes other than dissection.
50 yo mande, long hx of worsening claudication. 5cm long segment SFA occlusion. Best tx.
a. angioplasty
b. stent graft
c. bypass
d. exercise programme
e. cryotherapy
Still considered limited disease as < 10cm length. Infrainguinal. Best choice is endovascular revascularisation.RCT shows significantly higher patency rates of stenting over angioplasty alone for femoropopliteal artery lesions, however most reserve stent placement for acute failure of PTA. Therefore best answer probably A, angioplasty
.From TASC II 2007 guidelines (JVascSurg 2007)
• Acute limb ischaemia (ALI): Infrainguinal causes of ALI, such as embolism or thrombosis, are often treated with endovascular methods. Initial therapy with catheter-based thrombolysis should be considered in cases of acute thrombosis due to vulnerable atherosclerotic lesions or late bypass graft failures. When thrombolysis reveals underlying localized arterial disease, catheter-based revascularization becomes an attractive option. Stenoses and occlusions are rarely the sole cause of ALI or even severe chronic symptoms but these commonly lead to superimposed thrombosis and, therefore, should be treated to avoid recurrent thrombosis.
Left SVC drains into
coronary sinus orleft atrium
e. Mesenteric ischaemia T mesenteric vasculitisCSS = triad of asthma, hypereosinophilia & systemic small vessel granulomatous necrotizing vasculitis. Major involvement is of the heart, lungs & skin. (Dahnert – variant of PAN in asthmatic patients). Criteria for Dx (4 of 6) (1) asthma (wheezing, expiratory rhonchi), (2) eosinophilia of more than 10% in peripheral blood, (3) paranasal sinusitis, (4) pulmonary infiltrates (may be transient), (5) histological proof of vasculitis with extravascular eosinophils, and (6) mononeuritis multiplex or polyneuropathy.
a. Chronic pancreatitis F (but does cause PV thrombosis!)
a, c and e…
c. Doppler colour coding depends on the velocity of blood flow T brighter colours (or different colour shades) are used to display mean velocities
d. Doppler colour coding depends on the angle of isonisation T in colour Doppler the format of transducer determines direction of Doppler beam. The Doppler angle may change with vessel orientation & produce colour changes related only to changes in the Doppler angle & not to changes in blood flow.Colour displayed within BVs on colour Doppler function of (Brant, US core curriculum) \:• Flow velocity • Doppler angle • Presence of aliasing • Colour map utilized • Phase of cardiac cycle