Term
|
Definition
upper esophageal webs, iron deficiency anemia , and glossitis and cheilosis |
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Term
|
Definition
Endoscopy
- Thin (2-4 mm) ledge-like protrusions, extending < 5 mm into the esophageal lumen
- Usually located in the upper esophagus
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Term
Esophageal Webs
(microscopic) |
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Definition
Fibrovascular connective tissue with overlying squamous epithelium |
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Term
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Definition
- Circumferential and thick
- Found in the distal esophagus, above the gastroesophageal junction
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Term
Esophageal Rings
(microscopic) |
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Definition
- In addition to mucosa, contain submucosa and sometimes hypertrophic muscularis propria.
- A-____above GE junction, covered by squamous mucosa
- B-____: at squamocolumnar junction, also covered by squamous mucosa, may have gastric (cardia) mucosa on the underside
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Term
Esophageal Stenosis
(endoscopy) |
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Definition
- Narrowing of lumen, may see mucosal damage (dependant on cause)
- Lining usually thin, may be ulcerated
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Term
Esophageal Stenosis
(microscopic) |
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Definition
- Fibrous thickening of the submucosa and associated atrophy of muscularis propria
- May see secondary epithelial damage
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Term
Esophageal Stenosis
(clinical) |
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Definition
- Progressive dysphagia, first with solid foods, then progressing to soft foods or liquids.
- Develops slowly
- Patients may subconsciously modify their diet
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Term
|
Definition
- Progressive dysphagia and weight loss, chest pain, regurgitation
- Treatment: laparoscopic myotomy, pneumatic balloon dilitation (also Botox injection)
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Term
Secondary Achalasia
(etiology)
Primary is usually idiopathic |
|
Definition
- Diabetic autonomic neuropathy
- Infiltrative disorders (sarcoidosis, amyloidosis, malignancy)
- Chagas disease (destruction of myenteric plexus)
- Dorsal motor nuclei lesions (polio, surgical ablation
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Term
Hiatal Hernia
(sliding)
GE jxn? |
|
Definition
Above the diaphragm
no surgery unless complications |
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Term
|
Definition
Ge jxn normal position
Stomach herniates along side of stomach
surgery needed --> tissue can incarcerate and strangulate |
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Term
Types of Esophageal Diverticula |
|
Definition
- Zenker diverticulum (pharyngoesophageal diverticulum):
- Location: immediately above upper esophageal sphincter
- Can be several cm in diameter
- Epiphrenic diverticulum:
- Location: immediately above lower esophageal sphincter
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Term
|
Definition
Outpouchings of esophagus containing all 3 layers (mucosa, submucosa, and Muscularis Propia) |
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Term
Diverticulum
Clinical Presentation |
|
Definition
Massive amounts of regurgitation |
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Term
Esophageal Laceration
Mallory-Weiss tears |
|
Definition
- Linear tears of the esophageal mucosa (milliliters to centimeters)
- Longitudinally oriented, usually crossing the GE junction
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|
Term
Hematemesis is a presenting sx |
|
Definition
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Term
Esophageal Laceration
(presenting symptoms) |
|
Definition
- Usually presents with hematemesis
- Healing is usually rapid without sequelae without need for intervention
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Term
|
Definition
- Esophageal lacerations extending through esophageal wall, leading to perforation and mediastinitis
- Uncommon and potentially catastrophic, with an emergent presentation.
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Term
Esophageal Varices
(morphology) |
|
Definition
- Tortuous, dilated submucosal veins in distal esophagus and proximal stomach with overlying mucosa that may be eroded or inflamed
- Seen on venogram, but may collapse in surgical specimens and on autopsy
- With rupture, there is massive hemorrhage into the lumen or into the wall; overlying mucosa is may be ulcerated
- Past rupture can show venous thrombosis and inflammation
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|
Term
Presents w/ massive hematemesis |
|
Definition
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Term
Reflux Esophagitis
(GERD)
microscopic |
|
Definition
- eosinophils in the mucosa (and neutrophils in severe cases)
- basal zone hyperplasia - over 20% of the total epithelial thickness
- elongation of lamina propria papillae extending into upper third of the epithelium
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Term
Reflux Esophagitis (GERD)
endoscopy? |
|
Definition
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Term
GERD clinical presentation |
|
Definition
- Dysphagia, heartburn
- May have regurgitation of "sour brash"
- Can be inflammatory erosion, increased pressure with vomiting, or other
- Chronic GERD can cause severe chest pain that may mimic a myocardial infarction
- Complications: esophageal ulceration, hematemesism melena, strictures, Barrett esophagus.
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|
Term
Barret's Esophagus
(endoscopy) |
|
Definition
Tongues or patches of red velvety mucosa extending above the GE junction |
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Term
Barret's Esophagus
(microscopic) |
|
Definition
- Intestinal metaplasia, including goblet cells with intestinal-type mucin
- Intestinal-type goblet cells required for diagnosis (foveolar columnar cells are not sufficient)
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Term
Herpes simplex virus (HSV) |
|
Definition
- Endoscopic appearance: punched out ulcers
- Microscopic appearance: characteristic nuclear viral inclusions of HSV, degenerating epithelial cells at margin
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Term
|
Definition
- Endoscopic appearance: shallow ulcers
- Microscopic appearance: characteristic nuclear & cytoplasmic nuclear inclusions of CMV in capillary endothelial and stromal cells
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Term
|
Definition
- Endoscopic appearance: adherent grey-white pseudomembranes
- Microscopic appearance: densely matted fungal hyphae & inflammatory cells covering the mucosa
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Term
Presents w/ odynophagia (pain on swallowing) |
|
Definition
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Term
Chemical Esophagitis
(endoscopy) |
|
Definition
mild erythema, to mucosal sloughing, to necrosis |
|
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Term
Chemical Esophagitis
(microscopic) |
|
Definition
- May see dense infiltrates of neutrophils
- Chemical injury can cause necrosis of esophageal wall (may not have neutrophilic infiltrate).
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Term
Chemical Esophagitis
(clinical presentation) |
|
Definition
marked primarily by pain on swallowing, generally self-limited, with a history of esposure to damaging agent, radiation, etc. |
|
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Term
|
Definition
- Early dysplastic lesions appear as small grey-white, plaque-like thickenings
- May be polypoid or ulcerated and deeply infiltrating with wall thickening and luminal narrowing.
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Term
Squamous Cell Carcinoma
(clinical presentation) |
|
Definition
- Insidious onset of progressive dysphagia, odynophagia, and signs of obstruction
- May have a subconscious modification of the diet from solids to softer foods and liquids
- Weight loss and debilitation may develop
- Mid-esophagus
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Term
Adenocarcinoma
(endoscopy) |
|
Definition
- Usually located in the distal third of the esophagus
- Early lesions may appear as flat or raised patches on the mucosa
- Later lesions develop into large masses, either polypoid or ulcerated and deeply invasive.
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Term
Adenocarcinoma
(morphology) |
|
Definition
- Malignant gland-forming cells typical of invasive carcinoma, usually with intestinal-type morphology
- Mucin production is common
- Poorly differentiated tumors are less common
- Intestinal metaplasia (Barrett esophagus) is frquently detected in the mucosa adjacent to the tumor
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Term
Adenocarcinoma
(Clinical pte) |
|
Definition
Cannot differentiate from SCC of the esophagus until microscopic
- Progressive dysphagia, odynophagia, and signs of obstruction
- May have a subconscious modification of the diet from solids to softer foods and liquids
- Weight loss and debilitation may develop
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Term
|
Definition
heartburn
regurgitation
dysphagia |
|
|
Term
Gold Standard for GERD dx |
|
Definition
24-hour ambulatory esophageal pH monitoring |
|
|
Term
Functional Motility Disorder sx |
|
Definition
dysphagia to liquids only
(not all the case) |
|
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Term
Progressive Anatomical OBSTRUCTION
of esophagus |
|
Definition
progressive dysphagia to solids -->semi-solids -->liquids |
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Term
|
Definition
Non-relaxing LES (=primary abnl)
non-contractile esophagus on manometry study
Typical bird's beak appearance on barium swallow |
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