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A laymans guide to abdominal aortic aneurysms

The Aorta as we all know, is the main artery in our body. It emerges carrying fresh oxygenated blood from the heart, and faithfully circulates all over the body, albeit, with the help of many other minor arteries, making sure all the organs get their quota of oxygenated blood.

Think about it.

Right from your birth, till you die, there is this pipe , (thats one way of looking at it),  constantly handling the transport of blood.

Non-stop.

Depending on how sensibly you have lived, or are living, the walls of your aorta may or may not have plaque on them. Then, in addition, this main artery does not meander thru a clean barren landscape....it basically finds its way through a slew of organs like the lungs, liver , stomach, etc, all clobbering up the space. And if you are one of those indulgent types, there is all that adipose tissue(fatty tissue to all you newbies) trying to press around here and there. 

The point to be made, is , that like all human endeavours, this aorta, after years and years of faithfully negotiating the terrain, gets subjected to wear and tear, and even fatugue.

 Thats when we start seeing slackness in the aortic walls. A swelling here, a lump there. When the size of this gets significantly bigger, it starts affecting blood flow in the body. The heart, which is trying to pump this blood around, starts feeling the difference in its pumping ability. And you start showing problems with blood pressure !
 
 

These swellings in the aorta, are called aneurysms. Mostly detected when someone asks you to do an abdominal ultrasound exam. Swellings upto 5 cms in diameter one does not get desperate about. Anything more than 5 cms, and you start to lose sleep (that is, your family, not you).

 There are various places along the aorta that the swellings can turn up. Sometimes they are in the chest part of the aorta, somewhere behind the heart. Thats a very dangerous place for these things to be. Sometimes , they are lower down, as the aorta descends the abdominal cavity. If the aneurysm or swelling occurs before the aorta forks into renal arteries (taking blood to the kidneys), then this is said to be "supra-renal". Any trouble with this aneurysm, immediately affects the blood flow to the kidneys, causing BP problems, giddiness etc etc. Someyimes the swelling in the aorta is below the renal arteries. This is comparatively the least harmless place it can be.

 Males are , for some reason, more prone to these aneurysms.   The following pages  were a result of my search for information and understanding, when a close family member was diagnosed with a n abdominlal   aortic  aneurysm.  
 


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