Esophageal Chest Pain in Children with Asthma

Abstract
Sixteen patients with asthma and chest pain of >2 months duration underwent gastroenterological evaluation utilizing fiber-optic esophagogastroduodenoscopy (EGD), esophageal manometry, and Bernstein testing. Eleven of 16 patients (75%) had endoscopic and histologic evidence of esophagitis. One patient with esophagitis exhibited high-amplitude peristaltic contractions during motility testing. Four of these 11 patients (36%) had a positive Bernstein test. Extended intraesophageal pH monitoring of seven patients with esophagitis revealed significant gastroesophageal reflux (GER) in all of these patients. Chest pain was associated with an episode of GER in three patients (43%). Nine of 11 patients (82%) with esophagitis responded to medical therapy, resulting in resolution of esophageal inflammation and chest pain. One patient required Nissen fundoplication surgery after failure of medical therapy, and one patient who refused surgery progressively developed more severe esophagitis during 9 months of medical therapy. Children with asthma may have chest pain due to gastroesophageal reflux-associated esophagitis that usually responds to medical therapy.