BY DR. RICHARD L. McCANN
A thoracic aortic aneurysm or TAA is a bulging of the wall of the aorta, the main vessel that feeds blood from your heart to tissues and organs throughout your body. The aorta is normally about the size of a large garden hose. When the aorta expands to more than twice its normal diameter, it is called an aneurysm. When an aneurysm occurs in a portion of the aorta within your chest, it is called a thoracic (chest) aortic aneurysm or TAA.
Usually affects elders, but not always
About 15,000 people in the United States are diagnosed with this condition every year, usually people their 70s and 80s. Still, younger people can develop a TAA, particularly if they have certain genetic inherited diseases. You are more likely to develop a TAA if you are a smoker and if you have uncontrolled hypertension.
Thoracic aortic aneurysms are classified by their specific location, by their shape and by how they formed.
LOCATION: Aneurysms can occur in any of the three regions of the thoracic aorta:
- THE ASCENDING AORTA comes directly out of the heart.
- THE AORTIC ARCH is the next region; it has branches to provide blood to the upper body and to the head.
- THE DESCENDING AORTA travels through the left chest and passes through the diaphragm where it becomes the abdominal aorta.
SHAPE: Aneurysms can be:
- SACCULAR, affecting only a portion of the circumference of the aorta wall and bulging only on one side.
- FUSIFORM, involving the entire circumference of the wall and shaped like a fat sausage.