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Bloody esophagus
A 42-year-old patient, smoker and with a history of alcohol consumption, presented for an episode of upper gastrointestinal bleeding manifesting as hematemesis and melena.
Chest pain, hematemesis and melena.
Upper GI endoscopy revealed a necrotic appearance of the esophagus, with confluent erosions and ulcerations (grade D esophagitis), with a granular mucosa with diffused bleeding during endoscopic maneuvers (Figure 1, 2 and 3, Video 1).
Acute necrotizing esophagitis.
Acute necrotizing esophagitis is a relatively rare cause of upper gastrointestinal bleeding with multifactorial etiopathogenesis (massive gastric reflux due to gastroparesis, viral infections, corrosive mucosal injury or caused by high-dose alcohol ingestion, diabetes, pulmonary diseases, chronic kidney disease or liver cirrhosis, etc.) which causes ischemic necrosis of the distal esophagus. More than 100 cases are described in the literature.
Treatment is generally conservative (supportive) and includes hydration therapy, proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) and sucralfate, antibiotics, etc. Surgery or endoscopic interventions are described in approximately 25% of patients who have complications (stenosis, fistulas, perforations). Mortality is about 30%.
Acute necrotizing esophagitis is a rare entity with a variable clinical and endoscopic picture.
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