| Vascular Urgent Information 1 |
Vascular Type EDS is considered the most serious form of EDS due to the possibility of arterial or organ rupture. If a patient presents with signs of chest, abdominal pain (etc.) it
should be considered a TRAUMA SITUATION. Patient complaints should be
immediately investigated using MRA, MRI or CT-Scan testing — not x-rays.
CAROTID-CAVERNOUS FISTULA: LIFE-THREATENING EMERGENCY Emergency consideration should be given to any Vascular EDS patient who becomes aware of redness, pain and prominence of one or both eyes and the sound of pulsations in their head: this can be a manifestation of a life-threatening carotid-cavernous fistula.
It is absolutely critical to seek immediate hospital-based medical attention, and to inform emergency medical staff of the patient’s Vascular EDS and the risk of a carotid-cavernous fistula. Understanding Vascular Complications: A Primer of Essential Definitions (PDF) By James H. Black III, MD, FACS and George Arnaoutakis, MD, with illustrations by Jennifer E. Fairman, CMI, FAMI There is a silent animation by these authors that shows the types of aortic dissection and how they form. It is available in two formats; click on your choice of format, and the animation will either begin to play or you will be offered a choice to save it to your drive. In Windows Media Video .wmv format (5 MB) here; in Quicktime Movie .mov format (14 MB) here. See also EDNF’s Clinical Reference Manual: Vascular Type (a full-color, 20-page PDF) with detailed information on diagnosis, treatment, surgery/emergency medicince, and an extensive glossary. There is also a quick reference PDF pamphlet available, our Vascular Type EDS Medical Resource Guides. |