1. FISTUAL AND ATRESIA
Trachea-oesophageal fistulas
- Most common congenital oesophageal anomaly
- Classification – into 5 types
- Type C comprises 85% of cases
- Associated with VACTERL anomalies and maternal hydraminos
- Should be recognised in first 24hrs of birth
Clinical features
- Regurgitates feeding
- Continuous pouring of saliva from mouth
- Cough, cyanosis
Investigations
- Obstruction is revealed while passing NGT
- Contrast study – reveals fistula
- CXR, echo
Treatment
- Feeding via gastrostomy
- Right sided thoracotomy (opposite side to aortic arch
- Fistula resected and lower end anastomosed to blind upper segment
Oesophageal atresia
- Oesophagus doesn’t develop properly – congenital absence/closure of a normal body opening
- Proximal and distal oesophagus don’t communicate
- Clinical features – gastric distension, neonate’s inability to swallow
2. DIVERTICULA
- Outpouchings of the wall that contains layers of the oesophagus
- True (congenital) – involve all layers of gut
- False (acquired) – involve only mucosa and submucosa
Pulsion diverticulum (push from inside)
- False type – only involve mucosa and submucosa
- Due to increased intra-luminal oesophageal pressue – due to various motility disorders
- Pharyngeal pouch ( Zenker’s diverticulum ) – in 30-50 year olds
- Located immediately above the upper oesophageal sphincter (UOS)
- Clinical features – asymptomatic, dysphagia, regurgitation, halitosis
- Investigations – barium swallow
- Treatment – surgery for symptomatic pts
- Epiphrenic pulsion
- Occurs in lower oesophagus, due to obstruction in the distal oesophagus or due to in-coordinated lower oesophageal sphincter (LOS) relaxation
- Site is within 10cm of gastro-oesophageal junction (GOJ)
- Clinical features – dysphagia, regurgitation, cough, weight loss, chest pain
- Investigations – barium swallow, CT chest, endoscopic US
- Treatment – diverticuloplexy and oesophageal myotomy
Traction diverticulum (pull from outside)
- Occurs in mid oesophagus or in parabronchial region
- Due to mediastinal granulomatous disease – TB
- True type – contains all layers, due to traction by the healing fibrosing mediastinal lymph nodes
- Most common on the right hand side
- Clinical features – dysphagia, chest pain, regurgitation
- Investigations – CT, barium, manometry, endoscopy, blood test for TB
- Treatment
- Treat TB
- If diverticulum is <2cm then observ
- If >2cm then surgery (diverticuloplexy/myotomy)
3. STRICTURES
- Narrowing of oesophagus
- Stomach acid refluxes into oesophagus, causes oesophagitis, eventually leads to stricture
- Cause of strictures – six Cs
- Corrosive injuries, Carcinoma, Columnar lined oesophagus (Barrett’s), Capsules of tetracyclines, C vitamins, Chronic reflux due to GORD
Features of corrosive lesion
- Corrosives are the most common cause of oesophageal strictures – e.g. ingestion of alkali or acid
- Common in lower 1/3 of oesophagus
Acute phase
- Clinical features
- Severe pain, shock, laryngeal oedema
- Mediastinits, septicaemia, haemorrhage, perforation
- Treatment
- Neutralise
- Acid – milk, egg whites
- Alkali – vinegar, citrus fruit
- 1st degree burn
- 48 hours observation
- Regular follow up
- 2nd + 3rd degree burn
- Fluid therapy, antibiotics, nutrition, resuscitation, tracheostomy, resection if necrosed
- Neutralise
Chronic phase
- Clinical features
- Dysphagia, stricture, severe malnutrition
- Recurrent respiratory infection
- Trachea-oesophageal fistula formation
- Malignant changes
- Treatment
- Regular oesophageal dilation
- Balloon dilators
- Oesophageal bypass and resection
- Colon transposition
Schatzki rings
- Concentric symmetrical narrowing at the GOJ
- Associated with reflux disease
- Involve only mucosa and submucosa – not muscle
- Accompanied with hiatus hernia
- Clinical features – dysphagia to solid food comes on abruptly with complete obstruction (when ring <12mm)
- Investigations – barium swallow test
- Treatment – endoscopic dilation and treat associated reflux. Ring should not be excised