RESUMO
We present the case of a 29-year-old patient with multiple allergies, mild asthma and rhinoconjunctivitis who reported a history of esophageal impactions after ingestion of solid foods. These episodes resolved spontaneously at home and by self-induced vomiting and never required endoscopic removal. The patient presented to the emergency department due to a sensation of food impaction lasting more than 12 hours after eating meat the night before, which did not subside with the intake of liquids or self-induced vomiting. Endoscopic evaluation was requested for foreign body extraction. A meat bolus impacted in the distal esophagus was easily removed using a Roth basket, revealing a severe esophageal stricture that prevented passage of the endoscope into the gastric cavity. Furthermore, in the same area where the foreign body was previously located, a deep esophageal tear was seen. Given the high suspicion of perforation, the patient was examined, and thoracic and cervical crepitation was observed. It was decided to immediately insert, with only endoscopic control, a partially covered Ultraflex® esophageal stent measuring 18 mm in diameter and 15 cm in length. After insertion, clinical improvement and cessation of crepitation were observed.
RESUMO
Direct intestinal administration of levodopa-carbidopa gel has shown good results in selected patients with Parkinson's disease (1, 2). We want to present a complication related to the device necessary for the administration of this drug. A 58-year-old man, diagnosed with Parkinson's disease, treated for six months with levodopa-carbidopa intestinal gel, administered through a percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy (PEG) tube with jejunal extension, presented at the emergency department for abdominal pain. The patient complained abdominal discomfort that lasted two months. It was described as pain around the umbilical area that radiated to the left lumbar region, worsened after ingestion, and did not subside with conventional analgesia.