Disclaimer
We’re actively expanding Guideline Genius to cover the full UKMLA content map. You may notice some conditions not uploaded yet, or articles that only include diagnosis and management for now. For updates, follow us on Instagram @guidelinegenius.
We openly welcome any feedback or suggestions through the anonymous feedback box at the bottom of every article and we’ll do our best to respond promptly.

Thank you for your support.
The Guideline Genius Team

Total Live Articles: 312

Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm (AAA)

NICE guideline [NG156] Abdominal aortic aneurysm: diagnosis and management. Published Mar 2020.

NICE CKS Abdominal aortic aneurysm screening. Last revised: May 2024.

Expanded on the diagnostic pathway decision, based on haemodynamic instability to improve clarity.

Date: 19/11/2025

Background Information

Definition

AAA is defined as a permanent localised dilatation of the abdominal aorta [Ref]

  • Abdominal aortic diameter ≥3.0 cm, or
  • Artery diameter ≥1.5 times the normal diameter

Classification

Anatomical classification of AAA: [Ref]

Location Description
Infrarenal (~85% cases) Located below the renal arteries
Juxtarenal Originates near but does not involve the renal arteries
Pararenal Involves the origin of renal arteries
Suprarenal Located above the renal arteries, including the origins of visceral arteries

Aetiology

Major risk factors: [Ref]

  • Male (6x more common than in women)
  • >65 y/o
  • Smoking

Other risk factors: [Ref]

  • Hypertension
  • Cardiovascular disease and atherosclerosis
  • Peripheral aneurysm

Clinical Features

Unruptured AAA

Symptoms:

  • Mostly asymptomatic – most cases discovered incidentally
    • If symptomatic – usually abdominal / flank / back pain
  • Features from distal embolisation
    • Acute limb ischaemia
    • Blue toe syndrome

Examination findings:

  • Aortic bruit
  • Pulsatile + expansile abdominal mass

Symptomatic AAA usually indicates aneurysm expansion or impending rupture.

Ruptured AAA

Typical clinical presentation:

  • Sudden onset severe back and/or abdominal pain (+/- radiation to flank / buttocks / legs / groin)
  • Presyncope (from hypotension)
  • Pulsatile abdominal mass
  • Grey Turner and/or Cullen sign

Be aware that features of a ruptured AAA may mimic those of renal colic.

Guidelines

Investigation and Diagnosis

This section refers to the assessment of a symptomatic AAA (not screening for AAA, which is covered in a separate section below), and the diagnostic pathway is determined by haemodynamic stability.

Haemodynamically Stable (Unruptured AAA / Mild Rupture)

1st line test: aortic ultrasound (trans-abdominal)

  • Measure the inner-to-inner maximum anterior-posterior aortic diameter
  • ≥3.0 cm is diagnostic of AAA

 

Gold standard: CT angiography

  • Not routinely performed for just diagnosis
  • To be performed before AAA repair (CT angiography provides a detailed anatomical assessment for surgical planning)
  • Contrast extravasation from the abdominal aorta indicates a ruptured AAA

Haemodynamically Unstable (Major Rupture with Shock)

For unstable patients, the diagnosis is primarily clinical [Ref]

  • Based on hypotension, acute abdominal/back pain, and a pulsatile mass
  • Further imaging (i.e. ultrasound and CT angiography) should be abandoned → transfer immediately to operating theatre for intervention (see management section for details)

In haemodynamically unstable patients with ruptured AAA, ultrasound has limited value because it can confirm the presence of an aneurysm but cannot reliably detect active rupture or retroperitoneal bleeding. Its diagnostic accuracy for rupture is poor, and performing it risks delaying life-saving surgical intervention.

CT angiography, although the gold standard for diagnosing and characterising AAA, should not be performed in unstable patients because it requires transfer to the scanner, patient repositioning, intravenous contrast administration, and time for image acquisition. All of which can critically delay definitive surgical repair in a time-dependent emergency.

Management

Unruptured AAA

If an asymptomatic AAA is detected → refer to regional vascular service

  • Within 2 weeks if AAA is ≥5.5 cm
  • Within 12 weeks if AAA is 3.0-5.4 cm

 

Choice of definitive management (surgery vs conservative care):

  • Urgent repair (within 2 weeks) is indicated if:
    • Symptomatic (of any size)​​​​​, or
    • Asymptomatic +
      • ≥5.5 cm, or
      • >4.0 cm + growing >1cm / year

 

  • If repair is not indicated → offer conservative care

Surgical Repair

1st line: open surgical repair

 

Endovascular aneurysm repair (EVAR) is preferred if:

  • Hostile abdomen (e.g. active intra-abdominal infection, adhesions, extensive prior abdominal surgery)
  • Anaesthetic risks

Conservative Management

The main aim is to reduce the risk of progression: [Ref]

  • Smoking cessation
  • Blood pressure control
  • Consider statin therapy  in patients with AAA and evidence of aortic atherosclerosis

 

  • Ongoing surveillance with ultrasound (see screening section below for timing)

Ruptured AAA

Initial management: hypotensive resuscitation (permissive hypotension)

  • RCEM recommends aiming for SBP 90-120 mmHg
  • Rationale: aggressive fluid resuscitation to normal blood pressure can dislodge fragile clot formation at the site of rupture, leading to increased bleeding

 

Absolute priority: immediate surgical repair / EVAR

  • Do not delay surgery to stabilise the patient or to perform CT angiography

Screening

Routine screening for AAA:

  • Population: ALL ≥65 y/o men
  • Screening modality: one-off transabdominal ultrasound

 

Subsequent action depends on ultrasound findings:

Aortic diameter Interpretation Re-scanning timeframe
<3.0cm No aneurysm Discharge, no further scanning
3.0 – 4.4 cm Small AAA 12-monthly scan
4.5 – 5.4cm Medium AAA 3-monthly scan
≥5.5cm Large AAA Refer to vascular surgery

References


Share Your Feedback Below

UK medical guidelines made easy. From guidelines to genius in minutes!

Quick Links

Cookie Policy

Social Media

© 2026 GUIDELINE GENIUS LTD