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Case 4 - Esophageal Perforation

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So for this next case, this is actually an inpatient who was

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being seen by the emergency team, because after hours, oftentimes the emergency

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and the acute care populations are treated and seen by the same teams.

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So this came across our board, and this was a patient who was 63 years

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old, and he had had a stent placed across his GE junction for esophageal cancer.

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And he now is presenting with spiking fevers and difficulty breathing.

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So let's go through and see what we find. Going through in our standard approach,

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let's take a look at the lines and tubes and identify those.

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And there are a number of chest tubes.

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One here that's seen on the right that is positioned apically.

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There's also one that we see here in the basilar area.

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There's another one here on the right base that we see.

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So we've got probably three chest tubes.

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We've got a central venous,

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probably a PICC line here heading toward the central region.

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And let's see if we can figure out where it ends.

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It's hard to see it beyond the SVC.

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There are overlying, you know, oxygen tubing,

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there's overlying monitoring wires across the field.

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And if you window down, you can see nicely here the stent across the GE junction.

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So we've covered our lines and tube. Below the left lung zone,

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other than there being low lung volumes, I don't see any focal consolidation.

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I don't see that there's any evidence of pneumothorax.

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We do have almost a layering air fluid

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level, kind of pleural effusion that's happening here on the right side.

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Let's just window down a little bit better,

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where you can see kind of a nice air fluid level that's been created.

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We're not seeing the costophrenic angle very well.

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So this is something we definitely like

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to better understand in a patient who's recently gone under a procedure.

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He's got multiple lines and tubes who clearly have some underlying pathology

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to understand what's really going on better here.

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So, it could be a loculated pleural effusion,

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it could be related to the esophagus itself.

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Not really clear, but we'll kind of raise

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some questions and really recommend that the patient get a CT.

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Let's not forget about our lateral view.

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And again, you can see that air fluid

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level that we saw in the frontal view. The spinal canal looks well aligned.

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The remainder of the lateral view is not really so helpful, for me at least.

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So at this point,

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we have a patient whose status post denting with air fluid levels that are

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seen in the right lung with multiple lines and tubes like they're adequately placed.

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I would want to get a better

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evaluation of these air fluid levels to understand what's going on,

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to understand whether or not we've got a loculated fluid collection

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in the pleura, whether or not we have an empyema, whether or not there is, you know, some

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degree of perforation related to the esophagus.

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So we would recommend, at this point, a CT of the chest, ideally with contrast.

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As it turns out, this patient did get a CT of the chest. Because of renal function,

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he did not get contrast but we will do the best with what we've been given.

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On a scout view, again, pretty helpful.

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So you can see that air fluid level,

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it's kind of shifted and changes in its appearance.

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You can see really nicely the stent,

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the number of drainage catheters and the pleural space, as we saw before.

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So let's take a look at the soft tissues and then we'll go to the lungs.

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Kind of moving through,

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we see that the thyroid on the right is normal, but incidentally,

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there is no left thyroid, so he's probably had that removed.

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Take a look for any lymph nodes, and what

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we do see are scattered nodes along the paratracheal area and the AP window.

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But when we get down to the right posterior lobe, we do see this area of air

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fluid level, which is what we're seeing on the radiograph.

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We saw that on the scout.

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And now the question is, where is this coming from?

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So one of the questions was, do we think that there is a pleural

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effusion and was it loculated? While looking at the left,

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there does look like there's pleural fluid

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here and it is not loculated, it's just layering with atelectatic changes there.

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And then this area here on the right, looks like there is obviously air fluid level,

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but it doesn't clearly look like a loculated effusion.

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So we're going to have to put this

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together and to understand what's happening.

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So, moving from the bottom back, we see not only is there a feeding tube

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in the stomach, we see the two chest tubes entering here.

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There are actually three chest tubes entering here.

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Coming across our stent, we see lots of little gas around the stent.

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And this is the esophageal mass

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that obviously the stent was probably placed to help alleviate.

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But there's quite a bit of gas that seems like it's sitting around here.

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And as we move up, it looks like it opens up into this large collection.

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And so we'll look at this a little bit better on the lung windows,

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but I'm wondering whether or not we're looking at a contained perforation

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from the esophagus that's now sitting in the pleural space.

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So, again, we're moving through a...

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on the lung windows,

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we see that there is an apical pneumothorax here on the right and you've got this

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large lesion that is separate from the lung.

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So the lung is actually sitting along here

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pretty well, atelectatic and down.

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We've got lung here, but there are no lung markings in this area.

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So this is separate from lung and looks

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like it's probably sitting in pleura, comes across and sits here.

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But if we follow this back, the smaller foci of gas

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kind of lead us to the mass and the area of where the stent took place.

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So, again, here's, the air fluid level.

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We do have lung that's kind of draped around here.

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So this is not in lung.

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It looks like it's displacing lung.

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And then on the left side here,

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we can see that there are a number of tubes that are placed.

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There's no pneumothorax on that side.

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We do have a tube that's placed on the right side with a small apical pneumo.

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All right. So let's come back here and look at this

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collection and see if we can put it all together.

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So, stent here, crossing the GE junction,

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large distal esophageal mass. At that mass site

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and then around there, there's a lot of gas pockets that are seen.

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And that gas pocket is in continuity

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with this large air fluid level that is sitting in the pleural space,

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but also displacing the parenchyma here, air fluid level we've talked about.

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And this is related to an esophageal perforation.

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At the core of this is probably

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the esophageal cancer that's sitting there that the stent was placed.

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This is a large collection that could contain, whether it's gastric contents or

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stuff that's been taken PO and has moved through the esophagus,

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not across the stent, but into this cavity.

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It's not really clear, but we could have given contrast to see

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what was actually extravasating and where things were extravasating from.

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We did not give oral contrast, but we can recommend a fluoro study

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with gastrografin to better understand the mechanics.

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We didn't give IV contrast.

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I think in this case, the patient's kidney function wouldn't sustain that.

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And so some of the aspects of the nature

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of the enhancement of this collection, we can't comment on.

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But certainly given the history and the location of the lesion,

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this would be compatible with an esophageal lesion that is perforated.

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Contents has, you know, moved out of the esophagus either from the stomach

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or from above and is now collecting in this potential space.

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CT is helpful again for problem solving.

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And just to kind of round this out,

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we'll take a look at the same lesion on a couple of different viewpoints.

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And so on the sagittal, we can see nicely here the stent across the GE junction,

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and through the mass.

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You can see lots of the gas that's sitting in and around and adjacent to that area.

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The large air fluid level that is seen,

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and that we've talked about quite significantly.

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You can see the air bronchograms that are

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being displaced in lung by the air fluid level.

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This case does not have coronal views, but those would also be helpful.

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And we'll just take one last look at this

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with lung windows on, so you'll get a sense of what this may look like.

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And so moving through,

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again, from the left side into the area where the gas is forming,

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the air fluid level, you see the lung anterior to that.

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So one appearance of esophageal perforation, both on x-ray and on CT.

Report

Faculty

Jamlik-Omari Johnson, MD, FASER

Chair, Department of Radiology

University of Southern California

Tags

X-Ray (Plain Films)

Trauma

Pleural

Neoplastic

Mediastinum

Iatrogenic

Emergency

Chest

CT

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