AI Article Synopsis

  • Pseudoachalasia is a rare condition (up to 4% of cases) that mimics achalasia and is often linked to hidden cancers at the esophagus or cardia.
  • Delaying diagnosis can worsen the disease and limit treatment options, with serious risks from incorrect treatments aimed at achalasia.
  • Key indicators for suspicion of pseudoachalasia include older age at onset, rapid symptom progression, significant weight loss, and challenges during endoscopy; advanced diagnostic methods like endoscopic ultrasound are essential.

Article Abstract

Pseudoachalasia accounts for up to 4% of patients who present with achalasia-like picture and most often relates to occult malignancy at the cardia or gastroesophageal junction. Thus, any delay in diagnosis might lead to more advanced disease and less chance for curative therapy, not to mention the risk of serious complications resulting from the treatment of supposed achalasia instead of the true underlying cause. The entity should be suspected in patients with advanced age of onset, a shorter duration of symptoms, profound weight loss and difficulty in passing the gastroesophageal junction on endoscopy. The diagnosis of pseudoachalasia can be challenging as upper endoscopy with biopsy might be false negative in 25% of cases and lesions cannot always be detected on computerized tomography scan. Endoscopic ultrasound and guided biopsy play an increasingly important role in the workup of this condition. Treatment of pseudoachalasia depends on the underlying cause. The aim of this review is to highlight the clinicopathological features that distinguish pseudoachalasia from achalasia and the most appropriate diagnostic workup as well as the subsequent management for this condition.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00365521.2021.1925957DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

gastroesophageal junction
8
pseudoachalasia
5
pseudoachalasia diagnostic
4
diagnostic challenge
4
challenge consider
4
consider manage?
4
manage? pseudoachalasia
4
pseudoachalasia accounts
4
accounts patients
4
patients achalasia-like
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!