Treatment of corrosive burns of the esophagus
G. S. Campbell, H. F. Burnett, J. M. Ransom and G. D. Williams
Forty patients with caustic ingestion have been treated between 1955 and
1975. Strong alkali was the corrosive in 95%, and 80% were under 10 years
old. Early esophageal stricture developed in 18 patients four weeks after
lye ingestion. Among these, esophageal bougienge restored an adequate lumen
in two patients with short, soft annular strictures, and right colon
interposition was used for esophageal subsitution in ten who had long,
dense strictures. We recommend early diagnostic esophagoscopy, to the
uppermost level of burn injury only, to determine the presence and severity
of the esophageal injury. If esophagoscopy reveals esophageal burn injury,
corticosteroid and antibiotic therapy are continued. If no burn injury is
visualized, the patient is spared unnecessary treatment. Long, dense
strictures unresponsive to bougienage place the patient at risk from
instrumental perforation, and these patients should undergo colon
interposition through a substernal extrapleural tunnel.