Internal Medicine

(Wang) #1

P1: SBT


0521779407-03a CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 7, 2007 18:18


Aortic Coarctation 139

■Murmur mid systolic at anterior chest, back and spinous process,
may progress to continuous
■Occasionally poor lower extremity development
tests
Specific Diagnostic Tests:
■ECG: LVH
■chest x-ray: rib notching and “3” sign of aortic notch
Other Imaging Tests
■MRI/MRA offers good anatomic definition
■Echocardiography useful to assess gradient
■In adults, angiography remains gold standard to allow assessment
of coronaries before coarctation repair
differential diagnosis
■Takayasu’s or related aortitis, pseudocoarctation

management
What to Do First
■surgery

General Measures
■R/O CAD by coronary angiography if any suspicion
specific therapy
Indication for surgical therapy: detection of significant coartation
Treatment Options
■Surgical repair (usually excision with end-to-end anastomosis)

Side Effects & Contraindications
■Side effects: bleeding, infection, pneumothorax, death
➣Contraindications
Absolute: Contraindication to thoracotomy

follow-up
■Complications, residua and sequelae are frequent, require indefinite
follow-up.
complications and prognosis
■Complications: residual hypertension and increased risk of CAD, MI,
CHF, bicuspid aortic valve, re-coarctation
■Prognosis: generally good but CHF, MI are major causes of death at
11–25 years of follow-up
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