Aphagia, the most advanced form of dysphagia lusoria, has not been described in the literature. As patients usually undergo surgery after diagnosis, dysphagia almost never progresses to aphagia. Herein, we present the management of a male ARSA patient who postponed the treatment due to novel coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic and progressed to aphagia lusoria.
Figure 1. (a) Esophagus, (b) Clamped right aberrant subclavian artery.
Figure 3. (a) Esophageal lumen is totally closed. (b) Esophageal lumen is open.
Symptoms are usually dysphagia, dyspnea, retrosternal pain, cough, and weight loss in dysphagia lusoria. In a review consisting of 141 reports, the symptoms of female patients appeared earlier than men.[6] In our patient, the main symptoms were initiated with solid food dysphagia, cough, and weight loss. Due to delay in treatment, aphagia was developed and surgery was done under this condition. Barium esophagram is an important test for diagnosis of dysphagia lusoria. However, CTA, MRA and aortography are more valuable in definitive diagnosis. In our case, the diagnosis was made by CTA. Esophageal manometric measurements are used to predict the surgical outcome and follow-up after surgery.[7] In addition to direct complications of ARSA due to vascular ring, there are also late complications such as aneurysm and tracheoesophageal fistula.[8,9] Different congenital anomalies may accompany to ARSA. For instance, ARSA association with aortic coarctation has been described in the literature.[10]
Treatment depends on severity of the symptoms of disease. Diet adjustment may be sufficient in patients who have relatively slight compression, but most patients are candidates for surgical treatment.[11] In our case, surgical treatment was applied, as it was impossible to apply diet therapy.
Surgical mortality was reported between 16 and 25% in previous publications, but this rate has reached almost 0% with surgical and technological developments in recent years.[3,12] There is no standard approach for surgical treatment. It depends on the location of ARSA, complications, presence of other cardiovascular anomalies and experience of center.[10,13] Surgical approach may be right supraclavicular, right anterolateral thoracotomy, and median sternotomy.[14] The main goal of surgical treatment is ligation alone or ligation and division of the aberrant subclavian artery. Reimplantation or bypass of the subclavian artery is essential for upper limb perfusion. In our case, ligation and division of ARSA were performed from a right anterolateral thoracotomy approach. Also, right carotid subclavian bypass operation with a PTFE graft was performed simultaneously. It should be kept in mind that this approach can be used in eligible patients, owing to its excellent exposure and promising surgical results.
In conclusion, in addition to the direct effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, its indirect effects have caused many different clinical pictures. One of these is aphagia lusoria symptom that has not been described before in the literature. As a matter of fact, our case was planned to be treated before proceeding to this situation, but delayed admission caused this result. The fight against the COVID-19 pandemic continues actively all over the world. However, this is only the visible side of the iceberg, and it would take a long time for the consequences of invisible side to appear.
Patient Consent for Publication: A written informed consent was obtained from the patient.
Data Sharing Statement: The data that support the findings of this study are available from the corresponding author upon reasonable request.
Author Contributions: Idea/concept, critical review: F.A., S.G., E.Ş.; Design, analysis and/or interpretation, writing the article, references and fundings: F.A., S.G.; Control/supervision: F.A., E.Ş.; Data collection and/or processing, literature review: F.A., S.G., F.D.
Conflict of Interest: The authors declared no conflicts of interest with respect to the authorship and/or publication of this article.
Funding: The authors received no financial support for the research and/or authorship of this article.
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