AI Article Synopsis

  • The study analyzed a cohort of 3707 patients with achalasia-related esophageal motility disorders (AEMDs) to understand the prevalence and characteristics of dilated and sigmoid esophagus, and esophageal diverticulum (ED).
  • Key findings include that longer disease duration, advanced age, obesity, and type I achalasia are linked to the development of sigmoid esophagus, while severe symptoms and integrated relaxation pressure are negatively correlated.
  • The prevalence of ED was low, with correlations indicating that advanced age and non-dilated esophagus were factors in its development, highlighting the need for early diagnosis and treatment of AEMDs to prevent complications.

Article Abstract

Background/aims: Patients with achalasia-related esophageal motility disorders (AEMDs) frequently present with dilated and sigmoid esophagus, and develop esophageal diverticulum (ED), although the prevalence and patients characteristics require further elucidation.

Methods: We conducted a multicenter cohort study of 3707 patients with AEMDs from 14 facilities in Japan. Esophagography on 3682 patients were analyzed.

Results: Straight (n = 2798), sigmoid (n = 684), and advanced sigmoid esophagus (n = 200) were diagnosed. Multivariate analysis revealed that long disease duration, advanced age, obesity, and type I achalasia correlate positively, whereas severe symptoms and integrated relaxation pressure correlate negatively with development of sigmoid esophagus. In contrast, Grade II dilation (3.5-6.0 cm) was the most common (52.9%), while grade III dilation (≥ 6 cm) was rare (5.0%). We found early onset, male, obesity, and type I achalasia correlated positively, while advanced age correlated negatively with esophageal dilation. Dilated and sigmoid esophagus were found mostly in types I and II achalasia, but typically not found in spastic disorders. The prevalence of ED was low (n = 63, 1.7%), and non-dilated esophagus and advanced age correlated with ED development. Patients with right-sided ED (n = 35) had a long disease duration ( = 0.005) with low integrated relaxation pressure values ( = 0.008) compared with patients with left-sided ED (n = 22). Patients with multiple EDs (n = 6) had lower symptom severity than patients with a single ED ( = 0.022).

Conclusions: The etiologies of dilated esophagus, sigmoid esophagus, and ED are considered multifactorial and different. Early diagnosis and optimal treatment of AEMDs are necessary to prevent these conditions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8978127PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.5056/jnm21188DOI Listing

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