FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
All cases of Boerhaave syndrome must be admitted to surgical ICU:
- Cervical esophageal perforations may be treated by drainage alone.
- All thoracic and abdominal perforations require surgical intervention.
Discharge Criteria
None
Issues for Referral
Thoracic or general surgeon must be consulted for admission and possible operative intervention.
FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
As per surgeon recommendations
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
- Chest radiographs done immediately after injury may be normal.
- Left pleural space involvement is usually associated with a distal esophageal perforation.
- Right pleural space involvement is usually associated with proximal esophageal perforations.
- If esophagram is negative and there is high suspicion, repeat with patient in left and right decubitus positions.
- Immediate surgical consultation is the keystone of management.
- Significant increases in mortality are seen with delay in diagnosis and management.
ADDITIONAL READING
- Brinster CJ, Singhal S, Lee L, et al. Evolving options in the management of esophageal perforation.
Ann Thoracic Surg
. 2004;77:1475–1483.
- Katabathina VS, Restrepo CS, Martinez-Jimenez S, et al. Nonvascular, nontraumatic mediastinal emergencies in adults: A comprehensive review of imaging findings.
Radiographics
. 2011;31:1150–1153.
- Onat S, Ulku R, Cigdem KM, et al. Factors affecting the outcome of surgically treated non-iatrogenic traumatic cervical esophageal perforation: 28 years experience at a single center.
J Cardiothorac Surg
. 2010;5:46.
- Vogel SB, Rout WR, Martin TD, et al. Esophageal peforation in adults: Aggressive, conservative treatment lowers morbidity and mortality.
Ann Surg
. 2005;241:1016–1023.
- Wu JT, Mattox KL, Wall MJ Jr. Esophageal perforations: New perspectives and treatment paradigms.
J Trauma
. 2007;63:1173–1184.
CODES
ICD9
530.4 Perforation of esophagus
ICD10
K22.3 Perforation of esophagus
BOTULISM
Philip Shayne
•
Jean Wheeler
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
- Rare in US, causing <200 cases/yr; however, has significant bioterrorism potential.
- Caused by a polypeptide, heat-labile exotoxin produced by
Clostridium botulinum:
- Toxin blocks neuromuscular transmission in cholinergic nerve fibers.
- Symptoms occur by inhibition of acetylcholine release from presynaptic nerve membranes:
- Damage is permanent.
- Recovery is by formation of new synapses through sprouting from the axon.
- Onset: 12–72 hr after exposure; may be up to 1 wk after exposure:
- Death can occur 24 hr after onset of symptoms.
- Slow recovery; symptoms often persist for months
- Mortality:
- Untreated: 60–70%
- With supportive care: 3–10%
- 3 major types: Food-borne botulism, wound botulism, and infantile botulism (see “Pediatric Considerations”). Absorbed through mucosal surfaces or nonintact skin
- Food-borne botulism:
- Occurs by ingestion of preformed toxin; from improperly canned food, improper refrigeration
- Conditions required for exposure:
- Food product contaminated with
C. botulinum
bacilli or spores
- Proper conditions for germination of spores exist.
- Time and conditions permit production of toxin before eating.
- Food not heated sufficiently to destroy botulism toxin
- Toxin-containing food ingested by susceptible host
- Wound botulism:
- Clinical evidence of botulism after trauma with a resultant infected wound and no history suggestive of food-borne illness
- Botulinum isolated in about 50%
- Wounds usually contaminated with soil
- Majority of US cases from IV drug use
- Other types:
- Adult intestinal toxemia botulism:
- Seen in adults with functional or structural GI abnormalities, are immunocompromised or with prolonged antibiotic use
- Predisposes to
Clostridial
colonization
- May have sporadic or recurrent botulism with no known source and even after immunoglobulin treatment
- Iatrogenic botulism:
- Doses found in cosmetic applications are insufficient to cause systemic symptoms.
- No known recent cases from medical use.
- Symptoms would be expected to be classic.
- Inhalation botulism:
- Aerosolization of toxin may have bioterrorism applications. Last reported naturally occurring case in 1962 from the disposal of animal remains.
Pediatric Considerations
- Infantile botulism occurs from the ingestion of
C. botulinum
spores, which germinate in the gut and produce the toxin.
- Accounts for 50–76% of botulism cases
- 90% occur in children <6 mo:
- Associated with patient or family exposure to soil, dust, or agricultural industry.
- May also be associated with weaning from breast milk, which may alter intestinal flora and increase susceptibility to
Clostridia
infection.
- Usually presents with change in stool pattern or constipation, progressing over several days to symptoms of bulbar weakness, then descending flaccid paralysis.
- Slower onset is attributed to the toxin being produced locally as opposed to being ingested in 1 dose.
- C. botulinum
spores found in honey:
- Honey not recommended for children <1 yr.
ETIOLOGY
- C. botulinum
is a large spore-forming, usually gram-positive, strictly anaerobic bacilli ubiquitous in nature.
- Each strain produces antigenically distinct toxins, designated types A to G:
- Types A, B, E, and rarely F are responsible for most human cases.
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
History
- Ingestions/food history for previous 4–5 days:
- Exposures traditionally from home-processed fruit or vegetable products
- In prison populations ingestion of “pruno” (alcohol product created by prisoners using leftover food products)
- Immune status (AIDS, cancer, chronic illness)
- IV drug use
Physical-Exam
- Food-borne botulism (classic botulism):
- Bulbar weakness is invariably the initial presentation: Diplopia, dysphagia, dysarthria, and dysphonia
- Subsequent symmetric, descending weakness or paralysis of the extremities (hallmark of the disease)
- No sensory deficit
- May have progressively diminishing deep tendon reflexes
- Patient remains awake/alert; mentation unaffected.
- Ventilatory insufficiency from weakness of respiratory muscles
- Autonomic dysfunction (sympathetic and parasympathetic):
- Dry mouth
- Blurred vision
- Orthostatic hypotension
- Constipation
- Urinary retention
- Nausea and vomiting with food-borne botulism only
- Afebrile
- Wound botulism:
- Finding similar to food-borne botulism
- May be febrile as a result of soft-tissue infection
- Infantile botulism:
- Constipation
- Weakness
- Poor suck
- Weak cry
- Lethargy
- Hypotonia
- Flaccid facial expression
- Respiratory difficulty
- Inhalation botulism:
- Similar to food-borne botulism with absence of GI symptoms
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
- Diagnosis is entirely clinical.
- Workup focuses on differentiation from other conditions causing general paralysis.
- If diagnosis is suspected, immediately notify state health department or CDC (770-488-7100 for adults or 1-510-231-7600 for infant cases).
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
- CBC
- Electrolytes, BUN/creatinine, and glucose:
- Arterial blood gas (ABG):
- For signs of respiratory insufficiency
- Confirmatory testing via mouse assay performed by select state and federal labs, using samples from:
- Blood
- Feces
- Gastric contents
- Suspected food and containers
- Takes between 6–96 hr for results
- Anaerobic blood cultures:
- Nasal swab for ELISA test:
- For inhalation botulism, as less reliably detected in sera and stool than other forms
- Sample needs to be collected within 24 hr of exposure