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Dysphagia. Definitions. Dysphagia: difficulty swallowing Odynophagia: pain with swallowing Globus: feeling of “lump” or tightness in the throat Pyrosis: mid-epigastric burning or pain that radiates from the retrosternum up to the throat. Dysphagia: Background.
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Definitions Dysphagia: difficulty swallowing Odynophagia: pain with swallowing Globus: feeling of “lump” or tightness in the throat Pyrosis: mid-epigastric burning or pain that radiates from the retrosternum up to the throat
Dysphagia: Background • Dysphagia is a common symptoms • Present in 12% of patients admitted to acute care hospital and 50% of those in chronic care facilities • Subdivided into: • Oropharyngeal • Esophageal
Oropharyngeal Dysphagia • aka Transfer dysphagia • Patient is unable to initiate swallow • Frequently describe coughing or choking when attempting to eat • Dysphagia that occurs immediately or w/in 1s of swallowing • Recurrent pulmonary infections, hoarseness, pharyngonasal regurgitation, or dysarthria • Neuromuscular >> Mechanical
Esophageal Dysphagia • Sensation that food is hindered in its passage from mouth to the stomach • Patients complain that food “sticks,” “hangs up,” or “stops” • Occasionally associated with pain • Can be relieved by certain maneuvers including repeated swallowing, raising arms over the head, and Valsalva • Mechanical >> Neuromuscular (Motility)
Diagnosis • Etiology of dysphagia can be determined with an accuracy of approx. 80% by careful history alone
History: questions • Do you have trouble initiating swallowing, cough or choke with swallowing? • Is the dysphagia for solids, liquids, or both? • Diseases that affect the mucosa or cause luminal narrowing usually pose little barrier to the passage of liquids and thus these patients have dysphagia of solids • Diseases that disrupt peristalsis by affecting smooth muscle and its innervation may cause dysphagia to bothsolids and liquids
History: questions • Where does the patient perceive that ingested material sticks? • Pts. often perceive that material sticks either at or above the level of the lesion causing obstruction • Study of 139 patients with dysphagia due to stricture showed that the patients perception of the level of obstruction agree with endoscopist localization 74% of the time • Localization above the sternal notch is of little value • If localized below sternal notch than chances are excellent that the disorder involves the distal esophagus
History: questions • Is the dysphagia intermittent or progressive? • Benign rings/webs typically produce symptoms in intermittent episodes which can be separated by weeks, months, or years • Strictures/tumors will typically produce progressive symptoms
History: questions • Is there a history of chronic heartburn? • A history of chronic heartburn and/or GERD-symptoms supports the possibility possible peptic stricture • Study of 154 patients with benign strictures showed that 75% related a history of significant heartburn
History: questions • Has the patient taken medications likely to cause pill esophagitis? • A number of medications have the potential to have caustic effects on the esophagus with subsequent stricture formation • These include: doxycycline, potassium chloride, NSAIDs, quinidine, alendronate
History: questions • Is there a history of collagen vascular disease? • Scleroderma, RA and SLE can all cause disordered motility • The esophageal dysmotility is often associated with Raynaud’s phenomenon
History: questions • Is the patient immunocompromised? • 30-40% of patients with AIDS develop symptoms of esophageal disease • Primarily infectious with candida, CMV and HSV • Odynophagia is usually the predominant symptom but most will experience dysphagia as well
Physical Examination • Infrequently provides specific clues as to the etiology but… • Joint abnls, calcinosis, telangiectasias, rash CVD • Supraclavicular node malignancy • Dental erosions GERD • Conjunctival pallor web, malignancy
Diagnostic Modalities • Barium swallow (Esophagram) • Endoscopy • Esophageal Manometry • Videofluoroscopy
Barium Swallow • Safe, cheap initial study • More sensitive in detecting subtle narrowing by rings, strictures • Study of 60 pts with LE rings: BS demonstrated ring in 95% of cases whereas endoscopy only 58% • Fluoroscopy can identify abnormalities in motility (useful in achalasia, DES)
Endoscopy • Unless contraindicated, recommended in most cases of dysphagia • More sensitive than any study in identifying mucosal disease • Diagnostic: biopsy, direct visualization • Therapeutic: dilation (Maloney, Savory, balloon) and palliation (stenting, PEG)
Manometry Gold standard for motility disorders (achalasia, DES) Videofluoroscopy Used by speech therapy to assess oropharyngeal function Diagnostic Modalities
Case • 36 y/o male CPO. Complains of several year h/o food sticking in his chest which resolves after 5-10s and drinking water. Not getting worse. Has h/o mild heartburn treated with OTCs. • PMH: unremarkable • Meds: none • ???
Esophageal Rings Two types of distal esophageal rings: • A Rings • A broad (4-5mm) symmetrical band of hypertrophied muscle • Rare • B Rings • Shatzki’s ring • Very common (6-24% of UGIS, 4% of EGD) • Usually seen in association with a hiatal hernia • Thin 2mm membrane
Esophageal Rings Symptoms: • Intermittent solid food dysphagia • No weight loss Treatment: • No treatment if asymptomatic • Dilation if symptomatic
Case • 71 y/o female has longstanding h/o intermittent solid food dysphagia. • On exam: • Thin, pale • Angular cheilitis, spooning of fingernails • Labs: • Hb 8, MCV 72 ???
Esophageal Webs • Developmental anomalies characterized by one or more thin horizontal membranes of stratified squamous epithelium within the upper esophagus • Rarely encircle the lumen (unlike rings) • Plummer-Vinson syndrome: esophageal web, dysphagia, and IDA • Symptoms: solid food dysphagia or asymptomatic • Treatment: fragile membranes therefore respond well to dilation
Case • 32 y/o male presents to ER with c/o severe burning chest pain. • Further questioning reveals 6 months of dysphagia for both solids and liquids • Hx of weight loss • Occasionally vomits undigested material • ???
Achalasia • Most recognized motor disorder of the esophagus • Term achalasia means “failure to relax” which describes the cardinal feature of the disorder – failure of LES to relax • M=F • Usually seen in 20s-40s • Symptoms: solid and liquid dysphagia, regurgitation, chest pain, weight loss
Achalasia Diagnosis: • 1) CXR: air-fluid level, widened mediastinum • 2) Barium Swallow: “bird’s beak”, dilated esophagus • 3) Endoscopy: dilated esophagus, retained food, difficulty passing through the LES • 4) Manometry: • confirms/establishes the diagnosis • Cardinal features: a) aperistalsis, b) failure of LES relaxation, c) hypertensive LES
Case • 85 y/o male presents with progressivesolid food dysphagia. Now notes difficulty with every meal. Denies significant weight loss • PMH: GERD, DM2, HTN, HLP, CHD • Meds: zantac, glyburide, lisinopril, zocor, asa • ???
Peptic Stricture • 7-23% of pts w/ untreated GERD • Smooth walled, tapered, circumfrential narrowing of the lower esophagus • Reversible inflammationedema, cellular infiltrate, vascular congestioncollagen depositionirreversible fibrosis
Peptic Stricture • Symptoms: • Progressive solid food dysphagia, usually older males with history of GERD, no weight loss • Treatment: • Biopsies to exclude malignancy • Dilation • PPI