Esophageal perforation: Clinical sciences

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Esophageal perforation: Clinical sciences
Focused chief complaint
Abdominal pain
Altered mental status
Chest pain
Headache
GI bleed: Lower
GI bleed: Upper
Pelvic pain and vaginal bleeding: Pelvic pain
Pelvic pain and vaginal bleeding: Vaginal bleeding
Shortness of breath
Toxic ingestion
Assessments
USMLE® Step 2 questions
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Decision-Making Tree
Questions
USMLE® Step 2 style questions USMLE
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Transcript
Esophageal perforation is a serious condition in which a hole in the esophagus exposes the surrounding tissues to the contents of the gastrointestinal tract. Esophageal perforation typically results from iatrogenic trauma, for example in patients who recently underwent upper endoscopy or placement of a feeding tube. The second most common cause is Boerhaave syndrome due to forceful vomiting, and perforations can also result from swallowing foreign objects. Now, some individuals have anatomic etiologies that put them at higher risk for perforation such as Zenker diverticulum or esophageal stricture.
When it comes to the site of the perforation, it most commonly occurs in the left posterolateral aspect of the distal intrathoracic esophagus. Esophageal perforation can lead to severe and fatal complications like mediastinitis and sepsis.
Your first step in assessing a patient with a chief concern suggestive of esophageal perforation is to perform an ABCDE assessment to determine if the patient is stable or unstable. If the patient is unstable, start acute management immediately to stabilize the airway, breathing, and circulation. Next, obtain IV access, start fluid resuscitation, keep the patient NPO, administer antibiotics, and give IV proton pump inhibitors as soon as possible. Once you have initiated the acute management, your next step is to obtain a focused history, physical exam, and order labs like CBC, ABG, blood cultures, and lactate.
Alright, let's talk about history and physical examination. Symptoms may include fever, chills, and altered mental status. A patient will often have neck, chest, interscapular, and/or abdominal pain. Additionally, they might report dysphagia, odynophagia, or dyspnea. Lastly, some clues in history can point to the cause of the perforation. If a patient reports forceful vomiting, you should think about Boerhaave syndrome, which is when straining due to forceful vomiting causes esophageal perforation. Other clues to the cause include a history of foreign body ingestion, alcohol use disorder, or recent endoscopy.
Here’s a high-yield fact! If you find all elements of the Mackler triad, which includes history of vomiting, retrosternal pain, and subcutaneous emphysema, you can suspect Boerhaave syndrome as the most likely cause of the esophageal perforation.
Now, when it comes to the physical exam, it may reveal signs of sepsis, such as fever, tachycardia, tachypnea, and hypotension. Now, once the esophagus is perforated air will get into spaces it is not supposed to be in. So, other important findings to look out for include crepitus and subcutaneous emphysema. Subcutaneous emphysema and crepitus around the suprasternal notch and neck point to cervical perforation. Subcutaneous emphysema and crepitus on the chest wall are probably caused by thoracic perforation.
Now, if a patient is having mediastinal emphysema, you’ll hear crackling when you auscultate the lungs. As you are auscultating the chest, be on the lookout for the Hamman sign, which is characterized by a crunching sound over the apex of the heart that is in sync with the heartbeat. The Hamman sign is actually caused by the heart beating against the air in the chest cavity.
As for the labs, they might reveal leukocytosis and bacteremia, which would indicate an infection. You may also see metabolic acidosis and elevated lactate levels from sepsis and subsequent hypoperfusion.
Okay, if you see these findings in history, physical exam, and labs, you should suspect an esophageal perforation. The next step is to confirm the diagnosis with some imaging. Obtain neck, upright chest, and abdominal x-rays. The x-ray may show a pneumomediastinum, pneumothorax, pneumoperitoneum, subcutaneous emphysema, or pleural effusion. Since these signs point to the possibility of esophageal perforation, the next step would be to obtain a confirmatory study like a contrast esophagography to check for any small leaks. If this study is positive, you can diagnose an esophageal leak secondary to a perforation and possible mediastinitis.
Now that we have our diagnosis, let’s move on to management. Start with broad-spectrum antibiotics and antifungals, since microorganisms will have leaked out from the esophagus. Next, you want to keep the patient NPO and provide nutritional support, which requires total parenteral nutrition, or TPN. Finally, be sure to get an emergent surgical consultation for immediate intervention.
Alright, now that unstable patients are taken care of, let’s talk about stable patients. Your first step here is to obtain a focused history and physical exam as well as labs including a CBC.
Sources
- "Esophageal emergencies: WSES guidelines. 14, 1-15." World journal of emergency surgery (2019)
- "Esophageal perforation. 94(1), 35-41." Surgical Clinics (2014)
- "Esophageal perforation and acute bacterial mediastinitis: other causes of chest pain that can be easily missed. 94(32)." Medicine (2015)