Caustic ingestion
Appearance
Caustic ingestion
[edit | edit source]Aetiology
[edit | edit source]- Accidental small-volume ingestion of household products by children
- Most commonly a suicide attempt in adults - more extensive injuries
- Acid
- Coagulative necrosis
- Lessens tissue penetration
- Lower incidence of damage to surrounding organs
- Alkaline
- Liquefactive necrosis
- Deeper penetration and damage to surrounding organs
- The difference between tissue effects of acid and alkali is probably exaggerated, as both can cause life-threatening injuries
Pathophysiology
[edit | edit source]- Most deaths due to perforation, mediastinitis and sepsis
Initial management
[edit | edit source]- ABC
- Check for upper airway compromise - dyspnoea, drooling, stridor, hoarseness
- May require intubation. Need bronchoscopic guidance and preparation to do surgical airway due to potential difficulty.
- NBM
- IV ABx
- Acid-reducing agents
- No blind insertion of NGT/OGT
Workup
[edit | edit source]- CT chest and abdomen with IV and PO contrast first-line (if ok for radiation)
- CT can help avoid emergency oesophagectomy
- Barium swallow study
- Gastroscopy
- Most patients should have one to document the degree and extent of injury
- Aim to do it early, within 24 hours
- Can use a paediatric endoscope to minimise insufflation and mechanical stress
- Traditionally, should not proceed past an area of circumferential injury; however, an experienced endoscopist can proceed cautiously if it is thought to be important to see further
- CT chest and abdomen with IV and PO contrast first-line (if ok for radiation)
Classification
[edit | edit source]- Big difference between 2a and 2b - no complications in anyone with 2a or less
- CT classification:
| Grade 1 | Normal |
| Grade 2 | Wall and soft tissue oedema, increased wall enhancement |
| Grade 3 | Transmural necrosis with absent wall enhancement |
Management
[edit | edit source]- Approach by grade:
- 1 or 2a: supportive care
- 2B or higher: monitor as inpatient for at least a week, and re-image/operate with deterioration
- Supportive care in all patients
- IV Abx for those at risk of perforation
- NBM
- Surgery
- Indications
- On admission or at any time - full-thickness necrosis or perforation
- Oesophagogastrectomy is the standard operation
- Left with cervical oesophagostomy, defunctioned duodenum, and a feeding jejunostomy
- Indications
- Approach by grade:
Prognosis
[edit | edit source]- Grade 0 or 2a have excellent prognosis
- 2B and 3A have strictures in 70-100%
- 3B early mortality 65%, and mostly require oesophagectomy with reconstruction
Follow-up of complications
[edit | edit source]- Often complicated by strictures
- If 7-10 dilatations required at 2-week intervals, then consider oesophagectomy
- Obviously depends on expert advice
- Consider intra-lesional and systemic steroids
- Also mitomycin-C may be helpful
- May lead to higher rate of cancer - up to 16%???
- Likely warrants lifetime surveillance