Esophagus
Esophageal Stricture
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Esophageal Stricture
Definitions
Esophageal Stricture
Abnormal narrowing of the esophageal lumen
Epidemiology
Incidence
: 1.1 per 10,000
Ten times more common in white patients than black or asian patients
Pathophysiology
Narrowing in the esophageal lumen due to inflammation, neoplasm, fibrosis or injury
Dysphagia
occurs when
Esophagus
narrows to <13 mm from normal 20 mm size in adults
Risk Factors
Gastroesophageal Reflux
Disease
Hiatal Hernia
Peptic Ulcer Disease
Alcohol
Use
Dysphagia
past medical history
Causes
Neoplasm (e.g.
Esophageal Cancer
)
Gastroesophageal Reflux
(
GERD
)
Benign peptic strictures form with longstanding
GERD
Responsible for up to 70% of Esophageal Strictures in adults
Injury
Post-procedural Esophageal Stricture (e.g. upper endoscopy)
Ingested hot or toxic liquid or solid (e.g. corrosive liquid ingestion in children)
Radiation Therapy
(cervical and thoracic regions)
Prolonged
Nasogastric Tube
or
Orogastric Tube
Eosinophilic Esophagitis
Higher risk of stricture with prolonged untreated disease
Pill Esophagitis
(e.g.
NSAID
s,
Doxycycline
)
Prolonged use of causative medications
Viral Infection
s (esp.
Immunocompromised
)
Cytomegalovirus
(CMV)
Herpes Simplex Virus
(HSV)
Human Immunodeficiency Virus
(HIV)
Esophageal Candidiasis
Miscellaneous
Collagen
Vascular Disease
Esophageal Ring
or
Esophageal Web
Crohn Disease
Tuberculosis
Symptoms
Solid food
Dysphagia
(may progress to liquid
Dysphagia
)
Food impaction
Odynophagia
Chest Pain
Weight loss
Differential Diagnosis
See
Esophageal Dysphagia
External esophageal compression (e.g. thoracic mass)
Esophageal Spasm
Achalasia
Esophageal Cancer
Diagnosis
Upper Endoscopy (EGD) is preferred
Allows for direct visualization and biopsy
Endoscopic
Ultrasound
may be performed to evaluate lesion depth
Barium swallow
May be considered when upper endoscopy is not readily available
Test Sensitivity
: 95% for Esophageal Stricture
Other imaging
Chest XRay
or CT
Chest
Consider for excluding alternative diagnoses (e.g. external compression)
Grading
Dysphagia
Scoring System
Score 0: No
Dysphagia
Score 1: Moderate passage - able to eat some solid food
Score 2: Poor passage - able to eat only semi-solid food
Score 3: Very poor passage - able to swallow only liquids
Score 4: No passage - unable to swallow anything
Management
First-line measures
Esophageal Dilation (push/bougie or balloon)
Intralesional
Corticosteroid
(adjunctive to dilation, refractory cases)
Refractory case measures
Esophageal Stent such as self-expanding metal stent or SEMS (esp. in malignancy)
Surgical resection (esp. in malignancy)
Maintenance management
Proton Pump Inhibitor
(PPI, e.g.
Omeprazole
) longterm use
Complications
Food Impaction
Aspiration
Esophageal Perforation
Esophageal fistula
References
Moustarah (2020) StatPearls, accessed 9/24/20
Pasha (2014) Gastrointest Endosc 79(2): 191-201 [PubMed]
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