HomeAnswersMedical GastroenterologydysphagiaWhat could be the cause of the feeling of food getting stuck in the throat?

My father has a feeling that his food is getting stuck and takes time to settle. What could this be?

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The following is an actual conversation between an iCliniq user and a doctor that has been reviewed and published as a Premium Q&A.

Answered by

Dr. Ajeet Kumar

Medically reviewed by

Dr. Preetha. J

Published At October 26, 2020
Reviewed AtOctober 26, 2020

Patient's Query

Hi doctor,

I am looking for a second opinion on a barium x-ray performed for my father. He had the feeling that his food is getting stuck and takes time to settle. He had a barium x-ray done. The radiologists' report shows normal, so we need to confirm it. He has a previous history of diabetes and allergy.

Answered by Dr. Ajeet Kumar

Hello,

Welcome to icliniq.com.

Well, barium swallow reporting requires a lot of expertise, mainly if a timed barium esophagogram (TBE) is performed. I would be able to guide you if you can see the images of it. Secondly, I would need you to tell me some more information about your father, which would help me establish the underlying cause.

  • For how long does he have difficulty swallowing?
  • Is this progressive like worsening than before?
  • Is it to liquids and solids only or both? And if both, does all started at once?
  • Where exactly he feels that the food is stuck? Over throat, mid of chest, or just at the stomach area?
  • Does he have any acid reflux in the past?
  • Does he smoke? Or any other addiction?

Let me know; I can figure out the potential cause in him. He might require some more investigations like endoscopy to confirm things.

The Probable causes

Uninvestigated dysphagia.

Patient's Query

Hello doctor,

Thank you for your reply.

He had it for the past two to three months. It started after he met with a car accident, which gave a blow to his chest region. No significant injury or damage, but he was in pain around the rib area. It was at that time, his eating had reduced and was irregular. He feels it at the chest a little below the throat, feels it for solids, and needs liquids to push it down. He feels the heaviness till he burps and then feels better. He is also allergic to foods, and when he takes his medicine (Montelukast), he thinks he feels no such discomfort. Considering my dad is 64 years old, he is unwilling to go for the endoscopy. But we only want him to undergo it to rule out any serious concerns. I am attaching the screenshot from the reports for your review.

Answered by Dr. Ajeet Kumar

Hello,

Welcome back to icliniq.com.

I can understand his and your concern about not going for endoscopy. Still, after my overall assessment and after reviewing the images plus a radiology report (attachment removed to protect patient identity), I believe the endoscopy is the most sensible investigation to do. In images, there is no problem with the cervical esophagus (neck region) or mid to lower esophagus (chest region), and contrast is freely flowing in the stomach. However, there is a narrowing of the stomach, which is unable to distend properly. The radiologist has reported this a linitis plastica (leather stomach or non-distended stomach), a sign of stomach cancer. Please do not get panicked with this, the radiological findings sometimes appear as with no reason, and the sensible step is to rule out this with a gastroscopy. There may be some ulceration in the esophagus, causing him difficulty in swallowing, feeling of trapped air, and feeling relieved after burping. This thing will also be looked at closely and thoroughly with gastroscopy. The gastroscopy or esophagogastroduodenoscopy EGD is a simple procedure whereby an endoscopist, after sedation of the patients, passes an 11 to 13 mm diameter scope via the mouth into the esophagus (food pipe) and stomach. The procedure takes no more than 3 to 5 minutes. The endoscopist would see the lining of the esophagus and stomach, and in this case, it would observe the distensibility of the stomach by pouring gas. In the last endoscopist would take a biopsy of the suspicious areas. Let me know if I can discuss your father's concern regarding the procedure or any particular fears I can manage.

The Probable causes

Dysphagia, Linitis plastica (stomach cancer), gas and acid reflux.

Same symptoms don't mean you have the same problem. Consult a doctor now!

Dr. Ajeet Kumar
Dr. Ajeet Kumar

Medical Gastroenterology

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