Rationale
Dysphagia, defined as difficulty swallowing, should be regarded as a clear signal of potentially serious organic pathology, which therefore warrants careful and complete evaluation.
Causal Conditions
(list not exhaustive)
- Oropharyngeal dysphagia
- Structural
- Peritonsillar abscess
- Pharyngitis
- Tumour
- Zenker diverticulum
- Neuromuscular
- Central (e.g., cerebrovascular accident)
- Cranial nerves (e.g., amyotrophic lateral sclerosis)
- Systemic myopathies (e.g., dermatomyositis)
- Xerostomia
- Structural
- Esophageal dysphagia
- Mechanical obstruction
- Intrinsic
- Intermittent (e.g., lower esophageal ring, web)
- Progressive (e.g., carcinoma, peptic stricture)
- Foreign object
- Eosinophilic esophagitis
- Extrinsic (e.g., mediastinal mass)
- Intrinsic
- Neuromuscular disorder
- Intermittent (e.g., diffuse esophageal spasm)
- Progressive (e.g., scleroderma, achalasia)
- Mechanical obstruction
Key Objectives
Given a patient with dysphagia, the candidate will differentiate oropharyngeal from esophageal causes and initiate a management plan based on the underlying cause and severity.
Enabling Objectives
Given a patient with dysphagia, the candidate will
- list and interpret critical clinical findings, including
- determining from the history whether the problem is most likely oropharyngeal or upper or lower esophageal;
- identifying the characteristics of the esophageal dysphagia that suggest specific underlying disorders; and
- determining complication risk;
- list and interpret critical investigations, including determining whether specific investigations are required (e.g., barium swallow, endoscopy); and
- construct an effective initial management plan, including
- determining whether the patient needs specialized care and
- anticipating short-, medium-, and long-term complications (e.g., aspiration).