Esophagus, Barrett's esophagus

Details
Gender
Age
61 years
Organ System/Discipline
Diagnosis
Barrett's esophagus
Clinical History

Patient with gastro-esophageal reflux disease and a history of proton pump inhibitor treatment. Biopsies were taken near the esophageal-gastric junction of an area of unspecified endoscopic appearance.

Case Discussion

Barrett's esophagus occurs when there is reactive metaplasia in the squamous mucosa of the distal esophagus in response to chronic injury. The most important feature is to recognize the intestinal metaplasia, and that it is not dysplastic. The diagnosis of Barrett’s esophagus needs both the presence of an endoscopic abnormality consistent with Barrett’s mucosa and the presence of intestinal metaplasia on biopsy. If the endoscopy was normal (normal Z-line) then these changes are those of intestinal metaplasia in the cardia. Current guidelines suggest this needs no further follow-up, mainly because it is so common in the population in which 20-35% of Z-lines have this change if multiple biopsies are taken. In this section, focal pancreatic-type metaplasia is also seen (of unknown significance).

Image Contributors
Riddell, R., Nanji, S., Chang, M.

Cite

Riddell, R., Nanji, S., Chang, M. Esophagus, Barrett's esophagus. Digital Laboratory Medicine Library, Dept of Laboratory Medicine & Pathobiology, University of Toronto. Published . Accessed December 17, 2025. https://dev.dlml.cflabs.ca/image/esophagus-barretts-esophagus-lmp48698