Foreign body entrapment in the esophagus of healthy subjects—A manometric and scintigraphic study |
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Authors: | Hubert J. Stein M.D. Werner Schwizer M.D. Tom R. DeMeester M.D. Mario Albertucci M.D. Luigi Bonavina M.D. Kelly J. Spires-Williams |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Surgery, University of Southern California School of Medicine, 1510 San Pablo Street, Suite 514, CA 90033-4612 Los Angeles, USA;(2) Department of Surgery, Creighton University, Omaha, Nebraska, USA;(3) Department of Nuclear Medicine, Creighton University, Omaha, Nebraska, USA |
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Abstract: | Foreign body entrapment and mucosal injury caused by oral medications are increasingly reported to occur in the upper esophagus in apparently normal subjects. We performed esophageal manometry in 40 normal volunteers to determine whether a unique motility pattern in the upper third of the esophagus predisposes to entrapment of foreign bodies at this site; 18 normal volunteers also had transit scintigraphy of a gelatine capsule filled with a radionuclide. The esophageal body was divided into five consecutive segments starting proximally, with each segment corresponding to 20% of the total length. Amplitude, slope, and velocity of the esophageal contraction were markedly decreased in the second segment compared with the other segments. Entrapment and dissolution of a gelatine capsule occurred in 39% of volunteers in the proximal eosphagus correlating to the second segment, i.e., the segment with the lowest amplitude, slope, and velocity of esophageal contractions. The observation that wet swallows have greater amplitudes (P<0.01) and steeper slopes (P<0.05) than dry swallows explains why the occurrence of pill entrapment was reduced when taken with sufficient water. However, even with a water chaser of 120 mL, pill entrapment occurred at the second segment of the esophagus in 1 of 18 volunteers. The observed motility pattern in the proximal eosphagus provides a better explanation for the entrapment of foreign bodies at this site than compression of the esophagus by the left main stem bronchus, aortic arch, or left atrium as suggested by other investigators. |
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Keywords: | Foreign body entrapment Esophagus Manometry Transit scintigraphy Deglutition Deglutition disorders |
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