| Literature DB >> 35837081 |
Krystal Mills1, Temitayo Gboluaje1, Timothy Sobukonla1, Melvin Simien2.
Abstract
Dysphagia, which refers to difficulty swallowing, can be caused by benign pathologies of the esophagus such as gastroesophageal reflux disease which is the most common cause. There are also malignant pathologies such as esophageal carcinoma which should be excluded during the initial clinical evaluation of a patient. Esophageal pancreatic acinar heterotopia (EPAH) is an exceedingly rare finding and an uncommon differential for dysphagia. A search of the literature yielded few previously reported cases. In general, the reported prevalence of pancreatic acinar heterotopia ranges from 16% to 24% in asymptomatic patients and 3% in patients with a known history of Barrett's esophagitis. It has been found in patients ranging from as young as 1 day old to an incidental autopsy finding. Here, we present a brief literature review and a case of a 57-year-old man with severe dysphagia who was discovered to have EPAH in the gastroesophageal junction, associated with active inflammation and focal metaplasia. Copyright 2022, Mills et al.Entities:
Keywords: Dysphagia; Esophageal; Pancreatic acinar heterotopia
Year: 2022 PMID: 35837081 PMCID: PMC9239512 DOI: 10.14740/jmc3838
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Cases ISSN: 1923-4155
Figure 1Endoscopy image of raised mucosa at gastroesophageal junction.
Figure 2Irregular mucosa on endoscopic evaluation of gastroesophageal junction.
Figure 3Glandular mucosa of esophagus with arrow pointing to focal pancreatic acinar tissue (H&E, × 100 magnification).
Figure 4Glandular mucosa with arrow pointing to intestinal metaplasia (H&E, × 100 magnification).
Brief Literature Review of EPAH Case Series
| Literature | Age range | Number of cases | Location | Associated findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wang et al [ | 18 - 89 | 37 | GEJ | Oxyntic mucosa, oxyntocardiac mucosa, intestinal metaplasia |
| Schneider et al [ | < 20 to > 70 | 184 | GEJ | None |
EPAH: esophageal pancreatic acinar heterotopia; GEJ: gastroesophageal junction.
Brief Literature Review of EPAH Reports
| Age | Sex | Location | Symptoms | Treatment | Associated findings | Outcome | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Crighton et al [ | 58 | F | GEJ | Dysphagia | Esophagectomy | Intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm | Resolution |
| Mack et al [ | 25 | M | DE | RUQ and Epigastric pain | Resection | None | Resolution |
| Ulrych et al [ | 34 | M | DE | Severe dysphagia, odynophagia, weight loss | Esophagectomy | Inflammation | Resolution |
| Noffsinger et al [ | 47 | F | DE | Epigastric pain | Ivor-Lewis esophagogastrectomy, pyloroplasty, and a Witzel jejunostomy. | Inflammation, fat necrosis and fibrosis | Rehabilitation |
| Salo et al [ | 60 | M | ME | Epigastric pain | Minimal McKeown esophagectomy | Moderately differentiated adenocarcinoma | Recurrence |
| Guillou et al [ | 60 | M | GEJ | Epigastric pain | Resection | Ductal adenocarcinoma | Postoperative complication - pneumonia |
| Roshe at al [ | 45 | M | DE | Dysphagia | Esophagogastrectomy | Anaplastic carcinoma | Resolution |
| Razi [ | 43 | M | DE | Hemoptysis | Resection | None | Resolution |
| Yamagiwa et al [ | < 1 | M | PE | None | None | Congenital, esophageal atresia with tracheoesophageal fistula | None |
| Gananadha et al [ | 26 | F | DE | Epigastric pain | Resection | Pancreatitis, Active chronic inflammation with cystic dilated ducts, metaplasia | Resolution |
| Lowry et al [ | 25 | M | GEJ | Epigastric pain | Resection | None | Resolution |
EPAH: esophageal pancreatic acinar heterotopia; GEJ: gastroesophageal junction; DE: distal esophagus; ME: middle esophagus; PE: proximal esophagus; RUQ: right upper quadrant.