| Literature DB >> 27818955 |
Cristielle Peres de Freitas1, Carla Andrade Petrini2, Ramon Souza Goes Araújo2, Luiz Guilherme Cernaglia Aureliano Lima3, Patrícia Picciarelli de Lima1, Amaro Nunes Duarte-Neto4.
Abstract
An 84-year-old female patient was brought to the emergency department in cardiac arrest. Cardiopulmonary resuscitation maneuvers were performed but were unsuccessful. The patient had a past medical history of systemic arterial hypertension with target-organ lesions, including stroke and myocardial infarction. The autopsy was carried out, and the most striking finding was cardiac tamponade due to the rupture of an ascending aortic aneurysm at the site of a complex atheromatous plaque. Rupture is the most serious complication of a thoracic aneurysm and must be considered in the differential diagnosis of sudden death.Entities:
Keywords: Aortic Aneurysm; Atherosclerosis; Death, Sudden
Year: 2016 PMID: 27818955 PMCID: PMC5087980 DOI: 10.4322/acr.2016.044
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Autops Case Rep ISSN: 2236-1960
Figure 1Gross view of the heart and ascending aorta. A - A clot within pericardial sac, which was responsible for cardiac tamponade; B - External view of the anterior aspect of the entire heart showing the aneurysm of the ascending aorta, which measured 8.5 cm in diameter (white arrows); C - Internal view of the aorta, showing a fractured atheromatous plaque; D - The heart after formalin fixation. The left lateral view of the heart base and intrapericardial segments of the pulmonary trunk (PA) and aorta, showing the orifice of rupture with a surrounding hematoma (arrow).
Figure 2Photomicrographs of the aorta and myocardium. A - A low power view of the point of the rupture of the ascending aortic aneurysm: aorta with bleeding and clot (arrow), pulmonary artery (PA), and septal myocardium (arrow head (H&E, 5X); B - Detail of the fractured atheromatous plaque in the ascending aorta, with bleeding in the media and adventitia (H&E, 200X); C - Perivascular and interstitial myocardial fibrosis (H&E, 100X); D - Cardiomyocyte hypertrophy with cytoplasmic deposition of lipofuscin pigment (H&E, 400X).