Dysphagia Flashcards Preview

Junior Surgery- GI > Dysphagia > Flashcards

Flashcards in Dysphagia Deck (15)
Loading flashcards...
1
Q

What is dysphagia?

A

Difficulty in swallowing

2
Q

What is odynophagia?

A

Pain on swallowing

3
Q

What are the 5 key questions you want to ask about if someone is having problems with dysphagia?

A
  • Difficulty with solids + liquids from start?
  • Difficult to initiate the swallowing movement?
  • Is it painful?
  • Is it constant or intermittent?
  • Does the neck bulge or gurgle when drinking?
4
Q

If someone develope dysphagia of both solids and liquids, what would you be thinking in terms of causes?

A

Motility disorders - achalasia, CNS/pharyngeal dysfunction

5
Q

If someone developed difficulty swallowing solids, followed by difficulty swallowing liquids, what might you suspect to be the cause?

A

Suspect stricture - Benign/malignant

6
Q

If someone with dysphagia found it difficult to initiate the movement of swallowing, what might you suspect the cause to be?

A

Bulber palsy - especially if it presents

7
Q

If swallowing is painful, what might you suspect as the cause?

A
  • Ulceration - due to malignancy, oesophagitis, viral infection, fungal infection
  • Spasm
8
Q

If someone was having intermittent dysphagia, what might be the cause?

A

Oesophageal spasm

9
Q

If someone had constant dysphagia, what might you suspect to be the cause?

A

Stricture, unlike intermittent which would indicate spasm

10
Q

What might gurgling or bulging on drinking combined with dysphagia suggest?

A

May have pharyngeal pouch

11
Q

What signs would you want to look for in someone with dysphagia?

A
  • Cachexia
  • Anaemia
  • Lymphadenopathy
  • Systemic disease e.g. systemic sclerosis, CNS disease
12
Q

What are disoders of motility that can cause dysphagia?

A
  • Achalasia
  • Diffuse oesophageal spasm
  • Systemic sclerosis
  • Bulbar/Pseudobulbar Palsy
  • Parkinson’s disease
  • Wilson’s Disease
  • Myasthenia gravis
13
Q

What are non-motility related causes of dysphagia?

A
  • Malignant/Benign stricture
  • Extrinsic pressure - Lung cancer, mediastinal lymph nodes, Aortic aneurysm
  • Pharyngeal pouch
  • Oesophagitis
  • Globus
14
Q

What investigations would you consider doing in someone presenting with dysphagia?

A
  • Bloods - FBC, U+E’s
  • Other - Upper GI endoscopy +/- biopsy, Swallow contrast, oesophageal manometry, video fluoroscopy
15
Q

How would you manage benign oesophagal stricture?

A

Balloon dilatation