| Literature DB >> 30101056 |
Michelle-Thao Lieu1, Michael E Layoun2, David Dai3, Guy W Soo Hoo3,4, Jaime Betancourt3,4.
Abstract
Boerhaave syndrome, a rare yet frequently fatal diagnosis, is characterized by the spontaneous transmural rupture of the esophagus. The classic presentation of Boerhaave syndrome is characterized by Mackler's triad, consisting of chest pain, vomiting, and subcutaneous emphysema. However, Boerhaave syndrome rarely presents with all the features of Mackler's triad; instead, the common presentation of Boerhaave syndrome includes chest or epigastric pain, severe retching and vomiting, dyspnea, and shock. These symptoms are typically misdiagnosed as cardiogenic in origin. Due to its atypical presentation, rarity, and mimicry of emergent conditions, diagnosis of Boerhaave syndrome is often delayed, resulting in a high mortality rate at the time of diagnosis and with a subsequent exponential increase in mortality if treatment is delayed by greater than 48 hours. Here, we report two atypical presentations of Boerhaave syndrome presenting as tension hydropneumothorax and review ten previously reported cases of Boerhaave syndrome presenting as tension hydropneumothorax. This review serves to raise clinician awareness about the expansive and elusive ways by which esophageal perforation may present, and thereby facilitate timely and potentially life-saving diagnosis.Entities:
Keywords: Boerhaave syndrome; Esophageal perforation; Esophageal rupture; Mackler's triad; Tension hydropneumothorax; Tension pneumothorax
Year: 2018 PMID: 30101056 PMCID: PMC6083431 DOI: 10.1016/j.rmcr.2018.07.007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Respir Med Case Rep ISSN: 2213-0071
Fig. 1A) AP Chest radiograph demonstrating complete opacification of the left lung with mediastinal shift to the right and a small right-sided pleural effusion. B) Chest CT demonstrating extra-luminal free air in the mediastinum (red arrow), left-sided hydropneumothorax and small right-sided pleural effusion. (For interpretation of the references to colour in this figure legend, the reader is referred to the Web version of this article.)
Fig. 2A) AP Chest radiograph demonstrating a right-sided tension hydropneumothorax with mediastinal shift to the left (red arrows). B) Chest CT demonstrating free air around the esophagus (E) communicating (red arrow) with the pleural space. (For interpretation of the references to colour in this figure legend, the reader is referred to the Web version of this article.)
Presenting symptoms of tension hydropneumothorax in Boerhaave syndrome.
| Symptoms | % of patients presenting with symptoms |
|---|---|
| Chest pain | 6/12 (50%) |
| Epigastric pain | 4/12 (33%) |
| Vomiting | 11/12 (92%) |
| Dyspnea/Tachypnea | 8/12 (67%) |
Boerhaave syndrome with tension hydropneumothorax: reported cases.
| Source | Age | Sex | Initial imaging modality | Confirmatory imaging | Thoracic drainage | Mortality |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Current report–Case 1 | 65 | M | CXR - Complete opacification of lung with mediastinal shift to the right, small right-sided pleural effusion | CT Chest - Extraluminal free air in the mediastinum, left-sided hydropneumothorax and small right-sided pleural effusion | 4 L bilious, enteric output | Expired |
| Current report-Case 2 | 60 | M | CXR - Right-sided tension hydropneumothorax with mediastinal shift to the left | CT Chest - Free air around the esophagus communicating with the pleural space, left pleural effusion | 1 L exudative fluidwith high amylase, pH 6.9 | Expired |
| Nguyen Ho 2016 [ | 48 | M | CXR - Left-sided hydropneumothorax; Subsequent CXR - Large pleural effusion in left hemithorax | Chest CT - Left pleural effusion and mediastinal air in distal esophagus | Pleural fluid with amylase 9713 U/L | Survived |
| Vallabhajosyula 2016 [ | 43 | F | CXR - Right-sided tension pneumothorax, pleural effusions | CT Chest with water soluble oral contrast - Long segment tear of right anterolateral distal esophagus with adjacent contrast leak into mediastinum and right pleural cavity | Turbid yellow fluid with high neutrophils and protein, normal amylase, cholesterol, and LDH | Unknown |
| Ijaz 2015 [ | 21 | M | CXR - Left-sided hydropneumothorax | CT Chest - Left pneumothorax, no mediastinal air; Subsequent CT Chest 12 days later - direct communication between esophagus and left pleural space | 500 mL purulent, brown-green fluid - exudative, neutrophilic. Subsequent drainage chylous – triglycerides 1041 mg/dl, repeat pleural fluid analysis with amylase 12238 U/L | Expired |
| Tanaka 2014 [ | 45 | M | CXR - Massive left-sided pleural effusion, left-sided tension pneumothorax | CT Chest - Esophageal wall thickening, displacement of lower esophagus with mild surrounding mediastinal emphysema | 2 L green digestive juice | Survived |
| Veno 2013 [ | 67 | M | CXR - Tension pneumothorax with right-sided mediastinal shift, pleural effusion | Esophagram - Contrast extravasation from esophagus on left inferior side | 1.5 L white fluid, Subsequent thoracotomy with gastric content in thoracic cavity and empyema | Survived |
| Keane 2012 [ | 30 | M | CXR on admission - Right-sided pneumonia, pleural effusion, small pneumothorax. Repeat CXR after 48 hrs - sustained right-sided pneumothorax, complete opacification of the lung | CT Chest- Hydropneumothorax with mediastinal shift and contrast leak between distal esophagus and right pleural cavity | Brown thick fluid aspirate | Unknown |
| Suzuki 2012 [ | 80 | F | CXR - Right sided mediastinal shift | CT Chest - Left-sided pneumothorax, left pleural effusion, pneumomediastinum at lower level of esophagus | Food debris (broccoli) | Survived |
| Doherty 1996 [ | 47 | M | CXR - Tension pneumothorax, left-sided effusion, pneumomediastinum, cervical subcutaneous emphysema | CT Chest - Gastrograffin entering left pleural cavity, mediastinal emphysema, left pneumothorax, total collapse of LLL and RLL | Needle decompression - “brownish fluid”; Tube thoracostomy drained >5L of fluid (pH not acidic) | Unknown |
| Onyeka 1999 [ | 72 | F | None - Clinical diagnosis | Gastromiro study - Right lower linear esophageal rupture | Needle decompression; Tube thoracostomy draining 200 mL of bile-stained fluid containing food debris, pH 6.0. | Expired |
| Zamir 1995 [ | 68 | M | CXR - Left-sided tension pneumothorax and large left pleural effusion | Gastrograffin study - Left supradiaphragmatic extravasation | Unspecified | Survived |
Abbreviations: Chest roentgenogram (CXR), computed tomography (CT).