Acute esophageal necrosis
Acute esophageal necrosis, black esophagus, or Gurvits syndrome is a rare esophageal disorder. AEN defines itself with dark pigmentation of the esophagus, found during an upper gastrointestinal endoscopy. Pigmentation is usually black friable mucosa. The disorder is extremely rare, as only 89 patients over a span of 40 years have received this diagnosis. Specific study of the disorder's mortality rate is mentioned at 31.8%, but new research suggests mortality rates vary from 30 to 50%. The exact triggering mechanism for this disorder is still unknown, but is likely multifactorial.
Signs and symptoms
AEN has never been recorded as a one symptom disorder, but instead present by multiple symptoms. The symptoms vary from the severity of the disorder. The most classic sign of AEN is the dark pigmentation of esophageal mucosa in an upper endoscopy, usually viewed as an ulcer or as an infectious disease. Necrosis can be found mostly between the three distals of the esophagus, but stops abruptly at the gastroesophageal junction. The basic and most common symptoms reported are blood in stool and blood in vomiting. Upper gastrointestinal bleeding then is reported, and is very commonly represented in elderly patients. Black or bloody stools and hematemesis account for over three quarters of the case presentations. Abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, and unstable vital signs are common. A cardiovascular event was reported in ten percent of the total known cases.Risk factors
Modifiable
Having cancer is currently one of the most prevalent out of all conditions among patients. High blood pressure, Chronic lung conditions, Alcohol use disorder, excessive alcohol use combined with other recreational drug use, Kidney failure, and malnutrition are other major risk factors.Nonmodifiable
Lesser or unknown of effect
- Aortic dissection
- Anti-cardiolipin antibodies
- CMV infection
- Herpetic infection
- Hyperglycemia
- Hypersensitivity to broad-spectrum antibiotics
- Hypothermia
- Ischemia
- Gastric volvulus
- Posterior mediastinal haematoma
- Septic shock
- Steven Johnson syndrome