Bronchoendoscopic involvement in patients with carcinoma of middle third of esophagus in absence of respiratory symptoms.

Category Primary study
JournalThe Indian journal of chest diseases & allied sciences
Year 2003
BACKGROUND: Bronchoscopic examination has been advocated as an essential part of evaluation of patients with newly diagnosed esophageal malignancy. The present study describes the role of routine preoperative fibreoptic bronchoscopy in staging disease and assessing resectibility in patients with malignancy involving the middle third of esophagus. METHODS: Preoperative fibreoptic bronchoscopy was performed in 125 patients with carcinoma of the middle third of esophagus. None of the patients had clinical or chest radiographic evidence of extension of disease outside the esophagus. RESULTS: Abnormalities were detected in 33 patients (25.6%), the commonest being external compression over the posterior wall of trachea in 17 (13.6%). Other abnormalities noted were left vocal cord paresis in seven (5.6%); compression over one or both major bronchi in seven (5.6%) and over the left lower lobe bronchus in one (0.8%); infiltration of the left main bronchus in two (1.6%); and growth in trachea in four (3.2%), in left main bronchus in two (1.6%) and over cricoarytenoid area in one (0.8%) patient. CONCLUSIONS: Tracheobronchial involvement, even in the absence of clinical or radiological features, is not uncommon in esophageal cancer. Preoperative bronchoscopy is useful to assess the extent of disease and resectibility in these patients.
Epistemonikos ID: f3b562e6794e15b737e48ca347b786f11cb22d98
First added on: Sep 27, 2022