Martinez E J, Nord H J, Cooper B G
Department of Internal Medicine, University of South Florida College of Medicine, Tampa, USA.
South Med J. 1995 Jun;88(6):626-9. doi: 10.1097/00007611-199506000-00005.
We endoscopically evaluated odynophagia and/or dysphagia in 23 patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). Eleven patients (48%) were found to have esophageal ulcers. Seven of them had deep, sharply demarcated, well-circumscribed ulcer craters with raised edges; in two the ulcer extended to the muscularis propria. Ulcers were single in four patients, multiple in six, and unspecified in one. Biopsies were nondiagnostic. In eight patients, mycobacterial, viral, and fungal cultures were negative. Specific infections diagnosed in three patients were treated with appropriate agents. Ulcers were treated symptomatically, and seven patients received therapy for suspected viral etiology. Symptoms remained unchanged in five patients, improved in three, and resolved in two. Fifty-five percent of patients died within 3.6 months (mean) of diagnosis. Large solitary and multiple esophageal ulcers are common in AIDS patients with odynophagia and dysphagia.