A 72-year-old man who was receiving warfarin treatment for atrial fibrillation presented
with hematemesis associated with retrosternal discomfort. He had swallowed a chicken
bone 11 days before presentation. Hemodynamically, the patient was stable. The hemoglobin
level was normal, but both the prothrombin time and the international normalized ratio
were prolonged. Electrocardiography showed atrial fibrillation, with no ischemic changes.
Endoscopy revealed an extensive longitudinal lesion with a bluish hue in the esophagus,
extending from just beyond the upper esophageal sphincter to the gastroesophageal
junction. It appeared as an elevated plaque bulging into the lumen of the esophagus
(Figure [1]). Contrast-enhanced computed tomography (CT) demonstrated a concentric mural thickening
along the entire length of the thoracic esophagus (Figure [2]). A diagnosis of esophageal hematoma was made. Warfarin treatment was stopped, and
the patient was kept on a nothing-by-mouth regimen. A liquid diet was resumed 3 days
later, and he was discharged free of symptoms after 9 days. The hematoma had regressed
completely at endoscopy 8 weeks later (Figure [3]).
Figure 1 The endoscopic appearance of the hematoma at presentation.
Figure 2 Contrast-enhanced computed tomography of the thorax demonstrates concentric and marked
thickening of the esophageal wall (arrow). There is no aortic aneurysm or mediastinal
collection.
Figure 3 The endoscopic appearance 8 weeks later, showing complete resolution of the hematoma.
Esophageal hematoma, a rare clinical entity, is part of the spectrum of esophageal
injury. It can mimic other more serious or life-threatening conditions in various
clinical aspects. The appearance at endoscopy can be mistaken for an esophageal malignancy
or an aortoesophageal fistula from an aortic aneurysm [1]
[2]. Contrast-enhanced CT is useful to exclude aortic pathologies [3]. However, the CT findings may be misinterpreted as a neoplasm by less experienced
examiners [2]. Obtaining biopsy specimens from the lesion can lead to grave consequences, such
as bleeding and perforation [4]. Misdiagnosis can occur when esophageal hematoma presents with acute chest pain.
The acute onset and nature of the pain resemble that of aortic dissection, myocardial
infarction, or pulmonary embolism [2]
[4]. Awareness and recognition of this entity is critical, because conservative treatment
is the mainstay of management; further invasive investigations or treatments are potentially
dangerous.
Endoscopy_UCTN_Code_CCL_1AB_2AC_3AG