Abstract

Although esophageal perforation in children is associated with a spectrum of disease different from the one in adults, management is essentially the same for both groups. Over the past 11 years, 12 patients ranging in age from 2 days to 10 years were treated for 13 perforations. Perforation in the adult is associated with a high mortality rate. All children in this series survived. Injury was secondary to instrumentation in 10 cases and three resulted from the chronic erosion of a trapped foreign body. Of the 10 acute perforations, five occurred 12 days to 5 months after lye ingestion. Anastomotic narrowing was a factor in three other cases. Seven of the acute perforations involved the thoracic esophagus and were associated with a high morbidity rate. Management consisted of operative as well as nonoperative approaches. Consideration must be given to several clinical variables including location, cause, predisposing factors, underlying illnesses, associated injury, and promptness of medical attention.

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