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Welcome Applicants December 3, 2010. EE. Eosinophilic esophagitis. When to suspect. Boys or men < age 30 Dysphagia Allergic history Unexplained esophageal perforation Severe pain after dilitation of stricture. Allergy History. Rhinoconjunctivitis (57%) Wheezing (37%)
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Welcome Applicants December 3, 2010 EE
When to suspect • Boys or men < age 30 • Dysphagia • Allergic history • Unexplained esophageal perforation • Severe pain after dilitation of stricture
AllergyHistory • Rhinoconjunctivitis (57%) • Wheezing (37%) • Food allergy (46%) • Family history of atopy (74%) Family History • Family history of atopy (74%)
Clinical Features in Children • Mean age 9 • 2/3 male
EosinophilicEsophagitis • Diagnosis • Large number of eosinophils in esophagus • >15/hpf • Despite acid suppression with PPI for 2 months • OR negative pH probe study • Presence of characteristic clinical features
Esophageal morphology • Narrowing/ Proximal strictures • Multiple mucosal rings • Furrowing • Ulceration • Rigid “trachea like” • Whitish papules with granular exudates • Eosinophilic abscesses • Easily confused w candida
Supportive histology • Eosinophil microabscesses • Proximal esophageal involvement • Surface layering of eosinophils • Basal layer hyperplasia
Supportive labs • Peripheral eosinophilia 90% • Elevated IgE • ImmunoCAP70%
Diagnostic Challenge • Recruitment of eosinophils in variety of diseases • Inflammatory bowel disease • Infections • Gastroesophagealreflux
Distinguishing from GERD • >20 eosinophils/hpf • >15 eosinophils/hpf on 3 different sites
Pathogenesis • Incompletely understood • Familial clustering • Environmental antigens in genetically predisposed individuals • In mice: • ? Respiratory allergens ?
Treatment • Collaboration: Primary, GI, A/I • Acid suppression • Elimination diet • Topical glucocorticoids • Esophageal dilation • Reserved for significant strictures refractory to medical therapy
Outcome • Most respond • ? Chronic course ?