Title: Approach to dysphagia
1Approach to dysphagia
2Definition of Dysphagia
- The word dysphagia is derived from the Greek
phagia (to eat) and dys (with difficulty). It
specifically refers to the sensation of food
being hindered in its normal passage from the
mouth to the stomach.
3CLASSIFICATION
Oropharyngeal dysphagia
Esophageal dysphagia
Produced by abnormalities affecting the finely
tuned neuromuscular mechanism of the striated
muscle of the mouth, pharynx, and UES
Caused by the variety of disorders affecting the
smooth muscle esophagus
4Oropharyngeal dysphagia
- Inability to initiate the act of swallowing.
-
- It is a transfer problem caused by
- impaired ability to transfer food from mouth to
upper esophagus - impaired oral preparatory phase
- Clinical presentation
- food sticking in the throat
- difficulty initiating a swallow
- nasal regurgitation
- coughing during swallowing
- They may also complain of
- dysarthria
- nasal speech because of associated muscle
weaknesses - Other Neurological clinical findings
-
5Abnormalities Causing Oropharyngeal Dysphagia
- Neuromuscular Diseases
- Central nervous system (CNS)
- Cerebral vascular accident (e.g., brain stem or
pseudobulbar palsy) - Parkinson disease
- Wilson disease
- Multiple sclerosis
- Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
- Brain stem tumors
- Tabes dorsalis
- Miscellaneous congenital and degenerative
disorders of CNS
6Abnormalities Causing Oropharyngeal Dysphagia
- Neuromuscular Diseases
- Peripheral nervous system
- Bulbar poliomyelitis
- Peripheral neuropathies (e.g., diphtheria,
botulism, rabies, diabetes mellitus) - Motor end plate
- Myasthenia gravis
- Muscle
- Muscular dystrophies
- Primary myositis
- Metabolic myopathy (e.g., thyrotoxicosis,
myxedema, steroid myopathy) - Amyloidosis
- SLE
7Abnormalities Causing Oropharyngeal Dysphagia
- Local Structural Lesions
- Inflammatory
- Pharyngitis
- Abscess
- Tuberculosis
- Syphilis
- Neoplastic
- Congenital webs
- Plummer-Vinson syndrome
- Extrinsic compression
- Thyromegaly
- cervical spine hyperostosis
- Lymphadenopathy
- Surgical resection of the oropharynx
8Abnormalities Causing Oropharyngeal Dysphagia
- Disorders of the Upper Esophageal Sphincter (UES)
- Hypertensive UES (i.e., spasm, possibly in
globus, or gastroesophageal reflux - Hypotensive UES (e.g., esophagopharyngeal
regurgitation or aspiration) - Abnormal UES relaxation or opening
- Incomplete relaxation (e.g., cricopharyngeal
achalasia CNS lymphoma, oculopharyngeal muscular
dystrophy) - Inadequate opening (e.g., cricopharyngeal bar,
Zenker diverticulum) - Delayed relaxation (e.g., familial dysautonomia)
9 Etiology Of Esophageal Dysphagia
- Neuromuscular (Motility) Disorders
- Most common
- Achalasia
- Scleroderma
- Diffuse esophageal spasm
- Other associated motility abnormalities
- Nutcracker esophagus
- Hypertensive lower esophageal sphincter
- Vigorous achalasia
- Nonspecific esophageal dysmotility
- Other secondary motility disorders
- Other collagen disorders
- Chagas disease
10Etiology Of Esophageal Dysphagia
- Mechanical Lesions, Intrinsic
- Most common
- Peptic stricture
- Lower esophageal (Schatzki) ring
- Carcinoma
- Other
- Esophageal webs
- Esophageal diverticula
- Benign tumors
- Foreign bodies
11Etiology Of Esophageal Dysphagia
- Mechanical Lesions, Extrinsic
- Vascular compression
- Mediastinal abnormalities
- Cervical osteoarthritis
12Esophageal Dysphagia
- Three important questions are particularly
crucial. - What kind of food (i.e., liquid or solid)
produces the symptom? - Is the dysphagia intermittent or progressive?
- Is there associated heartburn?
- Physical examination is usually not revealing in
patients with esophageal dysphagia, with the
exception of scleroderma.
13Diagnosis
- History
- Examination
- CBC
- CxR
- Barium studies
- Endoscopy
- Computed tomography scanning
- Endoscopic ultrasound
- Endoscopy
- Esophageal Manometry
- Esophageal pH studies