Objective: Subjective assessment of primary achalasia is not accurate. We aimed to study the utility of surface area of barium retention in the objective assessment of these patients.
Methods: Subjective and objective esophageal functions of 99 patients with primary achalasia were evaluated initially and 43 of them were reevaluated 1 month after balloon dilation.
Results: Before dilation: Ninety-nine patients were enrolled. Forty-one of them were male. The mean age was 37.5+/-15.3 years. The mean score, resting lower esophageal sphincter pressure, height, surface and volume of barium retention at 5 min were 8.03+/-3.1, 59.1+/-20 mmHg, 9.9+/-4.9 cm, and 23.6+/-13.9 cm and 53.2+/-47.7 cm, respectively. Surface area at 5 min had best correlation and predictive value for resting lower esophageal sphincter pressure. After dilation: Forty-three of 99 patients were reevaluated after balloon dilation. The mean age was 36.8+/-13.6 years. Seventeen of them were male. Mean score, resting lower esophageal sphincter pressure, height, surface area and volume of barium retention at 5 min dropped significantly after dilation. Surface area at 5 min had best correlation and predictive value for lower esophageal sphincter pressure.
Conclusions: Surface area of barium retention at 5 min is an accurate objective tool to assess patients with primary achalasia. It is cheap and easy to perform; therefore, it could be used more frequently in postdilation follow-up.