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Ciprofloxacin-induced esophageal ulcers
Henry Alberto Royero-Gutiérrez
Henry Alberto Royero-Gutiérrez
Ciprofloxacin-induced esophageal ulcers
Úlceras esofágicas inducidas por ciprofloxacino
Acta Medica Colombiana, vol. 45, no. 2, p. 49, 2020
Asociacion Colombiana de Medicina Interna
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Images in internal medicine

Ciprofloxacin-induced esophageal ulcers

Úlceras esofágicas inducidas por ciprofloxacino

Henry Alberto Royero-Gutiérrez
Internista-Gastroenterólogo. Ocaña, Norte de Santander. Ocaña (Colombia)., Colombia
Acta Medica Colombiana, vol. 45, no. 2, p. 49, 2020
Asociacion Colombiana de Medicina Interna

Received: 17 April 2019

Accepted: 19 March 2020

The medications most frequently associated with esophageal ulcers are antibiotics. We report the case of a 71-year-old woman who took ciprofloxacin for a urinary tract infection. Seventy-two hours after taking it she experienced sudden-onset chest pain. On esophagogastroduodenoscopy (Figure 1), ulcers were found in the middle and lower third of the esophagus. When the medication was discontinued and the patient received proton pump inhibitors, she improved. Twelve weeks later, a follow up endoscopy was performed (Figure 2), showing scarring from the ulcers. The most common endoscopic findings of medication-induced esophageal lesions are esophageal ulcers (24.27-87.5%) 1,2 located in the middle third of the esophagus in 80% of cases, even in normal subjects, probably due to compression by the aortic arch and the left atrium, where the peristaltic amplitude is relatively low 1,2.


Figure 1
Excavated lesion in the middle third of the esophagus at the site of aortic narrowing. Mirror ulcers in the lower third of the esophagus.


Figure 2
Healthy middle third of the esophagus and ulcer scars in the lower third of the esophagus, 12 weeks later in the same patient.

Supplementary material
References
1. Dag S, Ózturk Z, Akim I, Tutar E, Cikman O, Guisen M. Drug-Induced esophageal ulcers: Case series and the review of the literature.Turk J Gastroenterol.2014; 25: 180-184
2. Kim Sh, Jeong Jb, Kim Jw, Koh Sj, Kim BW, Lee KL, et al. Clinical and endoscopic characteristics of drug-induced esophagitis.World J Gastroenterol.2014; 20: 10994-10999
Notes
Author notes

* Correspondence: Henry Alberto Royero Gutiérrez. Ocaña (Norte de Santander). E-mail: royerogastro@hotmail.com


Figure 1
Excavated lesion in the middle third of the esophagus at the site of aortic narrowing. Mirror ulcers in the lower third of the esophagus.

Figure 2
Healthy middle third of the esophagus and ulcer scars in the lower third of the esophagus, 12 weeks later in the same patient.
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