| Literature DB >> 31164915 |
Mircea Chirica1, Michael D Kelly2, Stefano Siboni3, Alberto Aiolfi3, Carlo Galdino Riva3, Emanuele Asti3, Davide Ferrari3, Ari Leppäniemi4, Richard P G Ten Broek5, Pierre Yves Brichon6, Yoram Kluger7, Gustavo Pereira Fraga8, Gil Frey6, Nelson Adami Andreollo8, Federico Coccolini9, Cristina Frattini10, Ernest E Moore11, Osvaldo Chiara12, Salomone Di Saverio13, Massimo Sartelli14, Dieter Weber15, Luca Ansaloni9, Walter Biffl16, Helene Corte17, Imtaz Wani18, Gianluca Baiocchi19, Pierre Cattan17, Fausto Catena20, Luigi Bonavina3.
Abstract
The esophagus traverses three body compartments (neck, thorax, and abdomen) and is surrounded at each level by vital organs. Injuries to the esophagus may be classified as foreign body ingestion, caustic ingestion, esophageal perforation, and esophageal trauma. These lesions can be life-threatening either by digestive contamination of surrounding structures in case of esophageal wall breach or concomitant damage of surrounding organs. Early diagnosis and timely therapeutic intervention are the keys of successful management.Entities:
Keywords: Caustic ingestion; Emergency management; Esophageal perforation; Esophageal trauma; Foreign body ingestion
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31164915 PMCID: PMC6544956 DOI: 10.1186/s13017-019-0245-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Emerg Surg ISSN: 1749-7922 Impact factor: 5.469
Fig. 1Endoscopic view of esophageal injury from button battery ingestion (at 6 h) in a 5-year old with intellectual disability
Fig. 2CT classification of corrosive injuries of the esophagus. a Grade I—homogenous enhancement of the esophageal wall while wall edema and mediastinal fat stranding are absent. b Grade IIa—internal enhancement of the esophageal mucosa and hypodense aspect of the esophageal wall which appears thickened, concomitant enhancement of the outer wall confers a “target” aspect. c Grade IIb—fine rim of external wall enhancement, the necrotic mucosa does not enhance anymore and fills the esophageal lumen which shows liquid density. d Grade III injuries show the absence of post-contrast wall enhancement
Criteria for non-operative management of esophageal perforations
| Delay in management | Early: less than 24 h |
| Clinical presentation | Absence of symptoms and signs of sepsis |
| Radiological criteria | Cervical or thoracic location of the esophageal perforation Contained perforation by surrounding tissues - Intramural - Minimal peri-esophageal extravasation of contrast material with intra-esophageal drainage - Absence of massive pleural contamination |
| Esophageal characteristics | No preexistent esophageal disease |
| Other | Possibility of close surveillance by expert esophageal team Availability of round the clock surgical and radiological skills |
Fig. 3Axial CT showing a right pleural effusion, mediastinal air and esophageal wall disruption in a patient with spontaneous EP (Boerhaaves). Patient managed by right thoracotomy and laparotomy
Fig. 4Coronal CT showing mediastinal air but minimal pleural reaction in a patient with spontaneous EP (Boerhaaves). The patient was successfully managed via laparotomy alone and transhiatal repair. Primary suture repair with interrupted full-thickness single-layer polyglycolic acid and fundoplication healed without a leak
Main management principles of esophageal injuries
| Foreign body ingestion (FB) | |
| • Computed tomography (CT) is the key exam in patients with suspected perforation or other FB-related complications | |
| • Emergent endoscopy (< 6 h) is recommended for sharp-pointed objects, batteries, magnets and for complete esophageal obstruction | |
| • Indications for surgery include perforation and FB which are irretrievable or close to vital structures | |
| • Esophagotomy with FB extraction and primary closure is the preferred approach. | |
| Caustic ingestion | |
| • The quantity of the ingested agent and the accidental-voluntary ingestion pattern condition outcomes | |
| • Emergency management can be performed safely relying on computed tomographic evaluation alone | |
| • Endoscopy remains the main diagnostic and therapeutic tool for caustic strictures | |
| • Patients who do not have full-thickness necrosis of digestive organs can be offered non-operative management (NOM) under close clinical and biological monitoring. Emergency resection of caustic necrosis can be lifesaving. | |
| Esophageal perforation (EP) | |
| • Contrast-enhanced CT and CT esophagography is the imaging examination of choice | |
| • NOM can be offered to stable patients with early presentation, contained esophageal disruption and minimal contamination of surrounding spaces. Endoscopic (clips, stents) treatment and interventional radiology techniques are useful adjuncts during NOM | |
| • Emergency surgery should be undertaken in patients who do not meet NOM criteria. Direct repair and adequate drainage is the treatment of choice; if repair is not feasible (large disruption, delayed surgery, preexistent esophageal disease), external drainage, esophageal exclusion or resection are possible options. | |
| Esophageal trauma | |
| • Physical examination and laboratory studies are not useful for early diagnosis of TIE. | |
| • Contrast-enhanced CT and CT esophagography should be performed in hemodynamically stable patients with suspicion of TIE. Preoperative flexible endoscopy is useful for TIE diagnosis in unstable patients | |
| • Patients with TIE can be offered NOM if they do not have EP or if they meet NOM criteria for EP | |
| • Patients with TIE should undergo immediate surgical treatment if they have hemodynamic instability, obvious non-contained extravasation of contrast material and systemic signs of severe sepsis | |
| • Operative repair is the treatment of choice of TIE. Appropriate management of associate injuries conditions patient survival |