Patients with esophageal intramural pseudodiverticulosis (EIP) usually develop symptoms
because of complications such as gastroesophageal reflux, motility disorders, infections,
strictures, fistulas, bleeding, or perforation.
A 44-year-old man with EIP developed an inflammatory stricture of the distal esophagus.
The stricture was dilated on three occasions, up to 51 Fr, but the effect was short-lived,
so we decided to insert a covered Polyflex stent (12 cm, 25/22 mm). This therapy was
successful and the stricture was found to have disappeared when the stent was removed
1 month later. However, the stent induced a perforation of a diverticulum beneath
the former covering, which we demonstrated on endoscopic ultrasound, which showed
an echo-poor area of thickening of the esophageal mucosa and submucosa with a normal
muscularis propria [1] and air in the mediastinum (Figure [1]). The mediastinitis was treated conservatively. Stroma-rich papillomas were resected
from what had been the distal margin of the stent (Figure [2]). The patient has been asymptomatic during 1 year of follow-up and the endoscopic
ultrasound appearance has not changed.
Figure 1 Radial endoscopic ultrasound image showing a thickened esophageal mucosa and submucosa
with a normal muscularis propria. Air can be seen outside the esophageal wall, in
the mediastinum, at the 5 o’clock and 8 o’clock positions.
Figure 2 Esophagogastroduodenoscopy after removing the Polyflex stent showed lumen-narrowing
papillomas at the former site of the distal stent margin, in the lower third of the
esophagus.
This is the first description of a mediastinitis induced by an endoscopic intervention
in EIP. Four cases of spontaneous rupture of a pseudodiverticulum with periesophageal
abscess or mediastinitis have been described [2]
[3]
[4]
[5]. In EIP with recurrent dysphagia caused by persistant stricture the choices for
management are forced endoscopic treatment or surgery. Temporary stent insertion is
one possible way of relieving the dysphagia. The covered Polyflex stent has great
potential in the treatment of strictures, but the use of a covered stent can lead
to the serious complication of mediastinitis. The use of an uncovered metal stent,
on the other hand, can lead to earlier tissue overgrowth through the mesh, and removal
of the embedded metal stent will be technically difficult.
Competing interests: None
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