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The Esophagus


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target="_blank" rel="nofollow" href="#ulink_7b59a140-8969-5046-8dc2-2afdbad44449">Figure 6.51 Drug‐induced esophagitis. Double‐contrast view shows several small, discrete ulcers (arrows) in the mid esophagus. This patient developed odynophagia after taking tetracycline. Herpes esophagitis could produce similar findings.

      Source: Reproduced from Levine MS. Radiology of the esophagus. Philadelphia: WB Saunders; 1989, with permission.

      Malignant tumors

      Esophageal carcinoma

      Esophageal carcinoma comprises about 1% of all cancers in the United States and 7% of all gastrointestinal tumors [123]. Patients with esophageal carcinoma usually present with dysphagia, but this is a late finding that generally develops only after the tumor has invaded periesophageal lymphatics or other mediastinal structures. As a result, most patients have advanced, unresectable lesions at the time of diagnosis, with overall five‐year survival rates of less than 10% [123]. Histologically, about 50% of these tumors are squamous cell carcinomas, and the remaining 50% are adenocarcinomas [123].

      Unlike squamous cell carcinomas of the esophagus, adenocarcinomas virtually always arise on a background of Barrett’s mucosa in the esophagus. The reported prevalence of adenocarcinoma in patients with Barrett’s esophagus is about 10% [123]. Studies using incidence rather than prevalence data indicate that the relative risk of adenocarcinoma developing in patients with Barrett’s esophagus may be 30–40 times greater than that in the general population [124].

Photo depicts drug-induced stricture. Double-contrast view shows a smooth, tapered stricture (arrows) in the upper thoracic esophagus caused by previous potassium chloride ingestion.

      Early esophageal cancer is defined histologically as cancer limited to the mucosa or submucosa without lymph node metastases. Unlike advanced carcinoma, early esophageal cancer is a readily curable lesion with five‐year survival rates of about 90% [123]. As mentioned previously, early diagnosis of esophageal cancer is usually limited by the late onset of symptoms in patients with this disease. In a minority of patients, however, dysphagia or upper gastrointestinal bleeding develops while the tumor is still at an early stage. Patients with early adenocarcinoma arising in Barrett’s mucosa may also seek medical attention because of their underlying reflux disease, so some early esophageal cancers may be detected fortuitously in patients with reflux symptoms [123].

Photo depicts eosinophilic esophagitis with a ringed esophagus. Photo depicts eosinophilic esophagitis with a small-caliber esophagus. Prone single-contrast view shows a long segment of narrowing involving the entire thoracic esophagus with smooth contours and a mean diameter of less than 20 mm. Photo depicts lichen planus with a small-caliber esophagus. Prone single-contrast view shows diffuse narrowing of the entire thoracic esophagus indistinguishable from that in eosinophilic esophagitis.

      Source: Reproduced from Rauschecker AM, Levine MS, Whitson MJ, et al. [108], with permission.

Photo depicts radiation injury to the esophagus. (A) Double-contrast view shows decreased distensibility of the mid esophagus and a granular appearance of the mucosa caused by acute radiation esophagitis. (B) Double-contrast view from a follow-up study six months later shows a smooth, tapered area of narrowing in the mid esophagus due to the development of a radiation stricture.

      Source: Reproduced from Levine [110], with permission.

Photo depicts chronic lye stricture. Double-contrast view shows a long stricture in the mid and distal esophagus caused by extensive scarring and fibrosis from lye ingestion many years earlier.