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I am new here and may be in the completely wrong place! :) We

recently adopted a little girl from Africa - she has esophageal

strictures caused by a caustic ingestion (swallowed lye as a toddler).

We have her treatment underway but it has been a little disheartening.

The dilations last only two weeks, and by the end of that time she is

closed back down to less than 1mm. We are trying to figure out where

to go from here. Is there anyone here with a child having dilations

this frequently?

Thanks,

(Jaso's mom)

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,

There is a whole other branch of esophageal surgeries that come under the category of the operation known as esophagoplasty. This essentially consists of a reconstruction of the esophagus. While rarely performed for achalasia patients, it is more commonly performed for people with either esophageal cancer or who have suffered strictures caused by a caustic agent, specifically what happened to your daughter.

Few surgeons perform it, and its not an easy surgery. Dr. Dempsey, of Temple University in Philadelphia, has done it, but not frequently.

I don't know where you live, but using a search engine, such as Google, click on the following link, might lead you to the right place.

esophagus esophagoplasty - Google Search

Also, Dr. Dempsey, can be located with the following link, which includes his phone number and email. He does respond to emails.

Temple University School of Medicine Department of Surgery Faculty: T. Dempsey, MD

In a message dated 1/4/2007 9:18:23 A.M. Eastern Standard Time, jennifer@... writes:

I am new here and may be in the completely wrong place! :) We recently adopted a little girl from Africa - she has esophageal strictures caused by a caustic ingestion (swallowed lye as a toddler). We have her treatment underway but it has been a little disheartening. The dilations last only two weeks, and by the end of that time she is closed back down to less than 1mm. We are trying to figure out where to go from here. Is there anyone here with a child having dilations this frequently?Thanks, (Jaso's mom)

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,

First let me commend you and congratulate you on your adoption!!

I don’t think there is anyone here with a child that has ever had

dilations done that frequently! Have they spoke of any long term procedures

that might help her? I would think all of that couldn’t be good for

her long term.

C Warren

Co-Founder

www.achalasia.us

From:

achalasia [mailto:achalasia ] On Behalf Of miaandco

Sent: Wednesday, January 03, 2007 10:04 PM

achalasia

Subject: newbie - question

I am new here and may be in the completely

wrong place! :) We

recently adopted a little girl from Africa - she has esophageal

strictures caused by a caustic ingestion (swallowed lye as a toddler).

We have her treatment underway but it has been a little disheartening.

The dilations last only two weeks, and by the end of that time she is

closed back down to less than 1mm. We are trying to figure out where

to go from here. Is there anyone here with a child having dilations

this frequently?

Thanks,

(Jaso's mom)

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wrote:

> I am new here and may be in the completely wrong place! :)

Right or wrong, welcome to the group.

I believe you are the first to seek help here for strictures from

swallowing lye. It can take repeated dilations to work. Unlike achalasia

where the main problem is the muscle with these strictures the problem

is scar tissue inside the esophagus. It has to be broken which means it

has to be stretched far enough but not so far that the damaged esophagus

ruptures. My guess is they will start small and go bigger as needed.

This can take some time. Also scar tissue can regrow so this can be an

ongoing fight. The best advise I can give you is to be sure the person

doing this has done lots of dilatations, hopefully some on children, and

some for caustic ingestion. Also, you probably already know this, she

will need to be checked regularly later in her life, even if she is not

having problems swallowing. She is at high risk for cancer because of

the lye. Typically it takes about 40 years to develop.

notan

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,

You might not be in the wrong place. Secondary achalasia can

occur as a result of the esophagus being constricted for a long

time. That can happen from certain surgeries, and I imagine that

it might also be possible as a result of a stricture.

What tests has Jaso had so far? Barium swallow, endoscopy,

manometry?

Where are you located? I'm asking in case someone on the list

can recommend a good doctor for achalasia in your area who could

diagnose it properly.

in Lancaster, PA

newbie - question

>I am new here and may be in the completely wrong place! :) We

> recently adopted a little girl from Africa - she has esophageal

> strictures caused by a caustic ingestion (swallowed lye as a

> toddler).

> We have her treatment underway but it has been a little

> disheartening.

> The dilations last only two weeks, and by the end of that time

> she is

> closed back down to less than 1mm. We are trying to figure out

> where

> to go from here. Is there anyone here with a child having

> dilations

> this frequently?

>

> Thanks,

> (Jaso's mom)

>

>

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Thanks . :) She had a dilation this last thursday and they injected steiroids into the stricture area (well, she has two stricture areas and they got steiroids into the top one - they had to stop the procedure halfway through the dilation of the bottom stricture because she was having oxygen problems). The hope is that when we go in again in two weeks that the steiroids will have helped the dilation to "hold" better. If that's the case, we should be able to stretch out the time between dilations. If not, we will start looking at stents - they can be used to hold the strictured areas open, but she is tricky because she has two areas. Last resort is a colonic interposition (replacing damaged esophagus with colon) but is really something we want to avoid and still may not be a great option for her because we're talking about two separate areas rather than one.....

It's all new to us and we're feeling our way through. She is such a joy and has had this condition as long as she can remember so she isn't affected too much emotionally by her limited diet and constant medical intervention. However, I can see that in the future the psychological effects must be hard to handle.....

-

RE: newbie - question

,

First let me commend you and congratulate you on your adoption!! I don’t think there is anyone here with a child that has ever had dilations done that frequently! Have they spoke of any long term procedures that might help her? I would think all of that couldn’t be good for her long term.

C Warren

Co-Founder

www.achalasia.us

From: achalasia [mailto:achalasia ] On Behalf Of miaandcoSent: Wednesday, January 03, 2007 10:04 PMachalasia Subject: newbie - question

I am new here and may be in the completely wrong place! :) We recently adopted a little girl from Africa - she has esophageal strictures caused by a caustic ingestion (swallowed lye as a toddler). We have her treatment underway but it has been a little disheartening. The dilations last only two weeks, and by the end of that time she is closed back down to less than 1mm. We are trying to figure out where to go from here. Is there anyone here with a child having dilations this frequently?Thanks, (Jaso's mom)

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Thanks - we are so fortunate to live 4 miles from The Children's Hospital, so her specialist is a pediatric gastroenterologist and has lots of experience with caustic ingestions and dilations. Her case is unique because she has two strictures and was untreated for so long (much can be done in the 24-48 hours following an ingestion, but we are three years down the road from her injury).

How often do people go in for a cancer screening? I know it is part of her future but haven't heard from anyone on how often they check.....I know the symptoms would be similar to what she already experiences so symptoms wouldn't give us any indication......

-

http://theisaacsliberia.blogspot.com

Re: newbie - question

wrote:> I am new here and may be in the completely wrong place! :)Right or wrong, welcome to the group.I believe you are the first to seek help here for strictures from swallowing lye. It can take repeated dilations to work. Unlike achalasia where the main problem is the muscle with these strictures the problem is scar tissue inside the esophagus. It has to be broken which means it has to be stretched far enough but not so far that the damaged esophagus ruptures. My guess is they will start small and go bigger as needed. This can take some time. Also scar tissue can regrow so this can be an ongoing fight. The best advise I can give you is to be sure the person doing this has done lots of dilatations, hopefully some on children, and some for caustic ingestion. Also, you probably already know this, she will need to be checked regularly later in her life, even if she is not having problems swallowing. She is at high risk for cancer because of the lye. Typically it takes about 40 years to develop.notan

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She has had barium swallow and endoscopy. Each dilation is done in floroscopy (sp?). I will ask our doc about achalasia....

Thanks!

-

http://theisaacsliberia.blogspot.com

newbie - question>I am new here and may be in the completely wrong place! :) We> recently adopted a little girl from Africa - she has esophageal> strictures caused by a caustic ingestion (swallowed lye as a > toddler).> We have her treatment underway but it has been a little > disheartening.> The dilations last only two weeks, and by the end of that time > she is> closed back down to less than 1mm. We are trying to figure out > where> to go from here. Is there anyone here with a child having > dilations> this frequently?>> Thanks,> (Jaso's mom)>>

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wrote:

How often do people go

in for a cancer screening?

I don't know what the standard for that would be, but it probably

depends on the number years from the injury.

notan

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wrote:

She had a dilation

this last thursday and they injected steiroids into the stricture area

(well, she has two stricture areas and they got steiroids into the top

one - they had to stop the procedure halfway through the dilation of

the bottom stricture because she was having oxygen problems). The hope

is that when we go in again in two weeks that the steiroids will have

helped the dilation to "hold" better.

The strictures are scar tissue but dilatation causes injury, which

causes inflammation, which causes more scar tissue, so you need more

dilatations. The steroids can help with the inflammation and scarring.

Something that can contribute to inflammation is stomach acid. If she

has any heartburn it may be good for her to be on something to reduce

acid until, as you say, the dilation holds. This is also true with

stents. One paper on removable stents reported that they did not work

if the acid measurement was above a certain level.

Is she eating enough? People here have foods they have found that work

for them when they are having problems. Different things work for

different people.

notan

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