Respiratory Medicine Case Reports (Jan 2022)

Dysphagia, an uncommon initial presentation of sarcoidosis

  • Navjot Somal,
  • Ravi Karan,
  • Aarti Maharaj,
  • Jeff Halperin,
  • Brent Boodhai,
  • Jeffrey Lipton,
  • Daniel J. Masri,
  • Kamlesh Kumar

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 37
p. 101647

Abstract

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Background: Sarcoidosis is a systemic inflammatory disease of unknown etiology with a myriad of clinical presentations depending on the organ systems involved. Neurosarcoidosis is an uncommon entity which is characterized by non-caseating granuloma infiltration of the central nervous system. Dysphagia in sarcoidosis is even more uncommon, and can involve one or more pathophysiological mechanisms: central nervous system involvement (cranial nerves associated with swallowing), lower motor neuron involvement (invasion of the enteric nervous plexus), direct muscle infiltration (invasion of the skeletal muscle portion of the esophagus and posterior pharynx), or mechanical obstruction (extrinsic compression by mediastinal lymph nodes). We report a case of a middle-aged woman presenting with severe dysphagia due to neurosarcoidosis which markedly improved after starting corticosteroids. The purpose of this case report is to highlight an atypical presentation of this disease.