General notes

  • Aneurysm — Defined as 1.5x the size of the vessel.

    • For the abdominal aorta 2cm is normal above the iliac arteries. 1cm is normal for the iliac arteries.

      • >3cm considered aneurysm above the bifurcation of the iliac arteries.

      • >1.5cm is considered an aneurysm for iliac arteries.

      • Between 2‐3cm, or an aorta that does not taper normally, is considered an ectatic (abnormal) aorta.

  • Must measure outer wall to outer wall horizontally in transverse orientation.

  • AAA’s >5cm have a high risk rapid growth and rupture (9876073).

  • Sensitivity and specificity is high for emergency physician performed POCUS for AAA (10969223, 16243207).

  • Smaller size does not mean AAA’s cannot rupture. Syncope, hypotension, or abdominal/flank pain with an AAA should be treated as impending rupture until proven otherwise.

Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm

  • Described as either fusiform or saccular.

  • Fusiform aneurysms are far more common and cause less symptoms. (25427112)

  • Saccular aneurysms rupture at smaller diameters and have higher wall stress. (31498185)

Thrombus formation

  • An intraluminal thrombus may form due to decreased peripheral laminar flow within an aneurysm.

  • Thrombus can grow in size and may even cause complete aortic occlusion resulting in mottled lower extremities and decreased distal flow (21871765)

  • Thrombus can be found in either ruptured or unruptured AAA’s. The presence of a thrombus does portend a faster growth rate (31990263).

  • A common pitfall is not measuring the thrombus — the thrombus must be included in the size measurement, do not measure within the rim of the thrombus.

Color doppler

  • Color doppler of a large abdominal aortic aneurysm will often reveal a characteristic bidirectional flow pattern called the “yin-yang” or Pepsi sign due to the swirling of blood. This may also be visualized in pseudoaneurysms.

  • Color doppler may also be used to see if there is any active leakage of blood.