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The esophagus is a hollow muscular tube, separated from the pharynx above and the stomach below by two tonically closed sphincters. Its primary function is to convey ingested material from the mouth to the stomach. Largely lacking digestive glands and enzymes, and exposed only briefly to nutrients, it has no active role in digestion.
The esophagus develops from the postpharyngeal foregut and can be distinguished from the stomach in the 4 wk old embryo. At the same time, the trachea begins to bud just anterior to the developing esophagus; the resulting laryngotracheal groove extends and becomes the lung. Disturbance of this stage can result in congenital anomalies such as tracheoesophageal fistula. The length of the esophagus is 8-10 cm at birth and doubles in the first 2-3 yr of life, reaching approximately 25 cm in the adult. The abdominal portion of the esophagus is as large as the stomach in an 8 wk old fetus but gradually shortens to a few millimeters at birth, attaining a final length of approximately 3 cm by a few years of age. This intraabdominal location of both the distal esophagus and the lower esophageal sphincter (LES) is an important antireflux mechanism, because an increase in intraabdominal pressure is also transmitted to the sphincter, augmenting its defense. Swallowing can be seen in utero as early as 16-20 wk of gestation, helping to circulate the amniotic fluid; polyhydramnios is a hallmark of lack of normal swallowing or of esophageal or upper gastrointestinal tract obstruction. Sucking and swallowing are not fully coordinated before 34 wk of gestation, a contributing factor for feeding difficulties in premature infants.
The luminal aspect of the esophagus is covered by thick, protective, nonkeratinized stratified squamous epithelium, which abruptly changes to simple columnar epithelium at the stomach's upper margin at the gastroesophageal junction (GEJ). This squamous epithelium is relatively resistant to damage by gastric secretions (in contrast to the ciliated columnar epithelium of the respiratory tract), but chronic irritation by gastric contents can result in morphometric changes (thickening of the basal cell layer and lengthening of papillary ingrowth into the epithelium) and subsequent metaplasia of the cells lining the lower esophagus from squamous to columnar. Deeper layers of the esophageal wall are composed successively of lamina propria, muscularis mucosae, submucosa, and the two layers of muscularis propria (circular surrounded by longitudinal). The two delimiting sphincters of the esophagus, the upper esophageal sphincter (UES) at the cricopharyngeus muscle and the LES at the GEJ, constrict the esophageal lumen at its proximal and distal boundaries. The muscularis propria of the upper third of the esophagus is predominantly striated, and that of the lower two-thirds is smooth muscle. Clinical conditions involving striated muscle (cricopharyngeal dysfunction, cerebral palsy) affect the upper esophagus, whereas those involving smooth muscle (achalasia, reflux esophagitis) affect the lower esophagus. The muscular LES and the mucosal “Z-line” of the GEJ may be discrepant up to several centimeters.
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