Abstract

We present the case of a 46-year old man with a two-year history of losing his denture presenting with cachexia and a two-month history of dysphagia to both liquids and solids associated with odynophagia. Review at the ENT department where a diagnostic rigid oesophagoscopy was done under general anaesthesia showed a denture impacted to the wall of the oesophagus at 17 cm from the incisor. Attempts at retrieval were unsuccessful as the denture was deeply embedded in the oesophageal wall and bled easily on attempted removal. He subsequently underwent a 2-stage surgical management approach by the cardiothoracic surgical team. Patient first underwent nutritional rehabilitation for a month through a created feeding gastrostomy tube via a limited midline laparotomy. He then had a open cervical oesophagotomy and removal of the denture. Currently doing well six months after surgery and tolerating normal oral diet.

Highlights

  • Dentures have been worn by patients for generations

  • We present the case of a 46-year old man with a two-year history of losing his denture presenting with cachexia and a two-month history of dysphagia to both liquids and solids associated with odynophagia

  • We present a case of an impacted denture causing a distal cervical oesophageal diverticulum who underwent a successful surgical removal through cervical oesophagotomy after failed attempted removal by rigid oesophagoscopy

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Summary

Introduction

Dentures have been worn by patients for generations. The plastic material from which present-day dentures are made is radiolucent making their diagnosis notoriously challenging by imaging.

Okyere et al DOI
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