Dysphagia and hypervitaminosis A: Cervical hyperostosis - 21/07/09
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Abstract |
Vertebral hyperostosis typically predominates at the thoracic spine and causes only minor symptoms. Involvement of the cervical spine may cause dysphagia due to pressure on the esophagus. We report three cases of dysphagia revealing cervical hyperostosis.
Case reports |
The patients were 3 men aged 54–73 years. Dysphagia was moderate in 2 patients and severe in 1 patient who had lost 4kg over 6 months. Stiffness of the neck with mild pain was present. One patient reported a neck injury in childhood and another had a brother and father with similar symptoms. Radiographs showed exuberant anterior cervical hyperostosis. Two patients also had hyperostotic changes at the thoracic spine and pelvis. The skin and neurological evaluation were normal. Findings were normal from standard blood tests (C-reactive protein, calcium, and vitamin D). Tests were negative for the HLA-B27 antigen in all 3 patients. Serum vitamin A levels were high, ranging from 894 to 1123μg/L (normal, 489–720). None of the patients reported taking retinoids or having unusual eating habits.
Discussion |
Dysphagia can result from anterior cervical hyperostosis. A role for hypervitaminosis A in the genesis of hyperostosis has long been suspected. In our patients, the absence of vitamin A supplementation suggests an abnormality in vitamin A metabolism.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : Diffuse, Idiopathic skeletal hyperostosis, Dysphagia, Retinol
Plan
Vol 76 - N° 4
P. 409-411 - juillet 2009 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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