Mallory-Weiss Syndrome

  • Longitudinal tears in the oesophagus at the oesophagogastric junction or gastric cardia
  • Believed to be due to severe vomiting or retching with failure of LOS relaxation
  • Most commonly seen in alcoholics
  • It may lead to massive haematemasis, inflammation, ulceration, mediatinitis or peritonitis

Morphology

  • Lacerations are longitudinal are may be several mm to several cm in length
  • The tears may involve only the mucosa or may penetrate deeply enough to perforate the wall
  • The histology is not distinctive and reflects trauma accompanied by fresh haemorrhage and non-specific inflammation
  • Infection of the mucosal defect may lead to an inflammatory ulcer or to mediastinitis

Clinical features

  • Oesophageal lacerations account for 5-10% of upper GI bleeds
  • Lacerations are not generally fatal and bleeding tends to be prompt
  • Rarely there may be oesophageal rupture called Boerhaave syndrome

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Disclaimer: These notes are my own personal study aid - DO NOT use them for medical advice!