oesophageal_rupture
Table of Contents
oesophageal rupture or perforation including Boerhaave syndrome
see also:
Introduction
- oesophageal rupture or perforation is a rare potentially life threatening condition
Aetiology
- Boerhaave syndrome
- spontaneous rupture or perforation of oesophagus due to severe straining or vomiting
- approx. a third do not have a history of vomiting
- typical patient is a middle aged man vomiting after dietary or alcohol excess
- most have a normal oesophagus but some have underlying conditions such as eosinophilic oesophagitis (EoE), oesophagitis in adults, oesophageal ulcers
- erosive perforations
- button batteries
- oesophageal ulcers
- iatrogenic following endoscopy
Clinical features
- these depend upon location, degree of leakage and time since injury
- usually have severe retrosternal chest pain
- if the perforation is in the cervical oesophagus, then neck pain, dysphagia or dysphonia may be features
- those with intra-abdominal oesophageal perforation will tend to have epigastric pain radiating to shoulder and/or back, worse on lying flat, and present with a rigid abdomen due to abdominal sepsis
- some present with sudden onset catastrophic haematemesis due to aorto-oesophageal fistula formation
- in a minority of patients, the following may also be present but do take hours to present:
- subcutaneous emphysema
- Hamman's sign if there is pneumomediastinum - crackling on auscultation with each heart beat
- pleural effusion
- usually within hours features of mediastinal or abdominal sepsis develop:
- SOB, fever, hypotension, etc
Diagnosis
- early diagnosis is crucial
- delays to diagnosis increase mortality substantially - overall mortality is said to be up to 50%
- erect CXR +/- neck Xray will often show pneumomediastinum or free gas under diaphragm (if intrabdominal perforation)
- Gastrografin swallow, although less sensitive, is preferred initially over a barium swallow as gastrografin is water soluble and causes less mediastinal inflammation if there is rupture or perforation
- sensitivity of barium swallow is said to be 90% for intrathoracic perforations but only 60% for cervical perforations
- CT chest/abdomen
- the preferred Ix if either gastrografin/barium is not possible (eg. uncooperative patient), or free gas under diaphragm
- highly sensitive for extravasated contrast or air but is poor at localisation of the perforation
- possible CT findings include:
- oesophageal wall oedema and thickening
- fluid or gas bubbles outside oesophagus wall
- mediastinal widening
- air or fluid in pleural spaces, retroperitoneum or lesser sac
- endoscopy is generally avoided as it may increase air into mediastinum or may cause further damage
DDx
- see the adult patient with chest pain in the ED - in particular ACS, aortic dissection, PE, pneumothorax
Mx in ED
- nil orally for at least 7 days
- resuscitative measures as per sepsis / septicaemia
- IV cannula
- bloods as per sepsis
- broad spectrum IV antibiotics
- early diagnosis as above
- early referral to surgery for possible drainage of any collections
- consideration for endoscopy in select situations
oesophageal_rupture.txt · Last modified: 2024/05/28 06:03 by gary1