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How do I rule out aortic dissection?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 January 2019

Robert Ohle*
Affiliation:
Department of Emergency Medicine, Northern Ontario School of Medicine, Sudbury, ON Health Science North Research Institute, Sudbury, ON
Sarah McIsaac
Affiliation:
Division of Critical Care, Department of Medicine, Northern Ontario School of Medicine, Sudbury, ON Health Science North Research Institute, Sudbury, ON
Paul Atkinson
Affiliation:
Dalhousie University, Saint John Regional Hospital, Saint John, NB
*
*Correspondence to: Dr. Robert Ohle, Health Science North Research Institute, Health Science North, 41 Ramsey Lake Rd., Sudbury, ON P3E 5J1; Email: [email protected]

Abstract

Type
Just the Facts
Copyright
Copyright © Canadian Association of Emergency Physicians 2019 

CLINICAL SCENARIO

A 75-year-old male presents with gradual onset central chest pain radiating to his back. Past medical history is significant for hypertension. Does he need a computed tomography (CT) scan to rule out acute aortic dissection?

KEY CLINICAL QUESTIONS

1.

How often is acute aortic dissection misdiagnosed?

Acute aortic dissection presents with a myriad of symptoms that overlap with more common diagnoses, and this can lead to a misdiagnosis in 14%–38% of cases.

Misdiagnosis has decreased from a staggering 98% diagnosed at postmortem in 1934, to 14%–38% in recent years.Reference Hirst, Varner and Kime1 The most common initial misdiagnoses are acute coronary syndrome, pulmonary embolism, and stroke. Patients with these suspected diagnoses should also be screened for high-risk features of acute aortic dissection. If none are present, they are unlikely to have an acute aortic dissection. If high-risk features are present, balance your clinical suspicion for an aortic dissection with the likelihood of an alternative diagnosis using an approach such as RAPIDReference Hansen, Nogareda and Hutchison2 (see Box 1).

Box 1. RAPID assessment of high-risk features for an acute aortic dissection

  • o Risk factors: connective tissue disease, aortic aneurysm, family history of aortic disease, bicuspid aortic valve

  • o Alternative diagnosis: (that mimics acute aortic dissection) acute coronary syndrome, pulmonary embolism, or stroke

  • o Physical exam: hypotension, pulse deficit, new murmur, or neurological deficit

  • o Impression: clinical suspicion for acute aortic dissection

  • o Description of pain: migrating, tearing, sharp, thunderclap, severe, worst ever

Think about acute aortic dissection if any are present.

2.

Can clinical assessment alone rule out acute aortic dissection?

A likely alternative diagnosis, or a low clinical suspicion, rules out acute aortic dissection 99% of the time.

A large prospective trial found that, in patients with an initial clinical suspicion of acute aortic dissection, clinical judgement without a CT scan reduced the probability of acute aortic dissection to 0.7%. A low volume centre will see 5–8 cases per year, and a high volume referral centre will see ~20/year. Although the percentage of cases misdiagnosed is high, the absolute number of aortic dissections is very low. Clinical reasoning alone has the potential to take you below your test threshold.

3.

Does the absence of high-risk features rule out the diagnosis of acute aortic dissection?

The absence of any high-risk feature for acute aortic dissection makes the diagnosis unlikely.

The American Heart Association (AHA) developed an evidence informed expert consensus clinical decision aid in 2010 (Table 1). Nazerian et al.Reference Nazerian, Mueller and de Matos Soeiro3 recently published the results of a prospective study looking at the combination of this rule and D-dimer testing. Using the rule alone would have missed 5% of cases.Reference Nazerian, Mueller and de Matos Soeiro3 Rogers et al.Reference Rogers, Hermann and Booher4 retrospectively applied it to the 2,500-case International Registry of Acute Aortic Dissection (IRAD) database in 2011. They found that 4% of the cases would be missed using the rule alone, reduced to 2.7% in combination with a negative chest X-ray.Reference Rogers, Hermann and Booher4 The six academic hospitals in Nazerian et al.’s study averaged 20 cases each per year, so 4% translates to 1 missed case every year.Reference Nazerian, Mueller and de Matos Soeiro3 For non-referral centres, 4% translates to 1 every 3 years. So out of the tens of thousands of patients who are seen over a 3-year period, only 1 would be a missed acute aortic dissection.Reference Nazerian, Mueller and de Matos Soeiro3

Table 1. AHA Aortic Dissection Detection Risk Score (ADD-RS)

4.

Can D-dimer testing help rule out acute aortic dissection in this patient?

In the absence of a proven diagnostic algorithm, it is difficult to know whether D-dimer will improve the miss rate or just increase the number of imaging studies performed.

D-dimer has a sensitivity ranging from 90%–100% and a specificity of around 60%. Similar to the use in testing for pulmonary embolism, if the clinical suspicion is high, a negative D-dimer does not rule out the diagnosis; if your suspicion is extremely low, a negative D-dimer will have little utility in lowering the probability of the condition any further. As of yet, we do not have any good criteria to define which patients might benefit from D-dimer testing to reduce risk below the threshold for CT. The European Society of Cardiology supports its use as part of the overall assessment. The AHA guidelines from 2010 do not support its use, and the American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP) states it should not be used in isolation. When studied in patients with an ADD-RS ≤ 1, this strategy proved to be quite sensitive, only missing 1.2% of all cases. However, implementation of this pathway could potentially lead to an increase in imaging without any proven benefit in reducing the miss rate.Reference Hiratzka, Bakris and Beckman5Reference Diercks, Promes, Schuur, Shah, Valente and Cantrill7

5.

If an acute aortic dissection is suspected, what is the imaging modality of choice?

Acute aortic dissection can be accurately diagnosed by a CT scan with intravenous contrast of the chest and abdomen.

CT is the initial imaging of choice to diagnose aortic dissection in the majority of patients. There is similar diagnostic accuracy for magnetic resonance imaging and transesophageal echocardiography with a sensitivity of 98%–100% and specificity of 95%–98%.Reference Hiratzka, Bakris and Beckman5 Transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) cannot rule out acute aortic dissection but has the ability to rule it in if a dissection flap is seen. The sensitivity and specificity of TTE ranges from 77%–80% and 93%–96%, respectively, for the involvement of the ascending aorta. However, TTE is successful in detecting a distal dissection of the thoracic aorta in only 70% of patients.Reference Hiratzka, Bakris and Beckman5, Reference Diercks, Promes, Schuur, Shah, Valente and Cantrill7

6.

When should treatment be initiated for an acute aortic dissection?

Initial management of a confirmed case involves expedited surgical referral and immediate symptom (pain/nausea), heart rate, and blood pressure control.

Treatment is aimed at reducing propagation of the dissection along the aorta by controlling shear stress. If there is any suspicion, treatment should begin with aggressive symptom control of pain and nausea. If there is a high probability or confirmed diagnosis, then control of the heart rate (<60 bpm) should be initiated. Beta-blockers are the initial medication of choice and have been associated with a decrease in mortality.Reference Hiratzka, Bakris and Beckman5 If after heart rate control the systolic blood pressure is ?>?120 mm Hg, a vasodilator should be initiated (target systolic blood pressure of 100–120 mm Hg).

CASE RESOLUTION

An electrocardiogram and troponins are negative. You get a chest X-ray that is also normal. An aortic dissection is possible, but the probability is so low that no further workup is required.

KEY POINTS

  1. 1. There is no current validated clinical decision rule that, in isolation, can rule out the presence of acute aortic dissection.

  2. 2. Clinical features can help decide which patients are low risk; however, definitive investigation by a CT is required if an acute aortic dissection is under serious consideration, and there is not an alternative diagnosis that could explain the patient’s symptoms.

  3. 3. Acute aortic dissection is a rare presentation to the emergency department that should be considered in your differential, because the mortality rate is significant if not diagnosed in a timely manner.

Competing interests

None declared.

References

REFERENCES

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3.Nazerian, P, Mueller, C, de Matos Soeiro, A, et al. Diagnostic accuracy of the aortic dissection detection risk score plus D-dimer for acute aortic syndromes: the ADvISED Prospective Multicenter Study. Circulation 2017: CIRCULATIONAHA. 117.029457.Google Scholar
4.Rogers, AM, Hermann, LK, Booher, AM, et al. Sensitivity of the aortic dissection detection risk score, a novel guideline-based tool for identification of acute aortic dissection at initial presentation: results from the International Registry of Acute Aortic Dissection. Circulation 2011;123(20):2213–8.10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.110.988568Google Scholar
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6.Erbel, R, Aboyans, V, Boileau, C, et al. 2014 ESC Guidelines on the diagnosis and treatment of aortic diseases. Eur Heart J 2014;35(41):28732926.Google Scholar
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Figure 0

Table 1. AHA Aortic Dissection Detection Risk Score (ADD-RS)