## Correct Answer: D. Esophageal manometry The clinical presentation of dysphagia and regurgitation with a barium swallow finding (presumed to show the classic "bird's beak" appearance at the gastroesophageal junction) is pathognomonic for achalasia. While barium swallow provides excellent morphological evidence, **esophageal manometry is the gold standard for functional diagnosis of achalasia**. Manometry demonstrates the hallmark findings: (1) incomplete lower esophageal sphincter (LES) relaxation with elevated resting pressure (>45 mmHg), and (2) absent or ineffective esophageal peristalsis in the body. These functional abnormalities—not visible on imaging—define the disease and differentiate true achalasia from pseudoachalasia (malignancy, scleroderma). In Indian clinical practice, manometry is essential before definitive treatment (pneumatic dilation, POEM, or myotomy) to confirm the diagnosis and rule out secondary causes. The test is performed using high-resolution manometry (HRM) or conventional water-perfused systems, with the Chicago Classification (v3.0) now standard for interpretation. Barium swallow alone cannot assess sphincter function or peristalsis; it only shows anatomical changes. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Endoscopy** — Endoscopy is useful to exclude pseudoachalasia (malignancy, stricture) and assess mucosal integrity, but it cannot measure sphincter pressure or peristaltic function. It is a screening tool, not diagnostic for achalasia. Many patients with achalasia have a normal endoscopy, making it insufficient as a gold standard. **B. CECT** — CECT provides excellent anatomical detail of the esophagus and mediastinum and can show dilated esophagus with air-fluid levels, but it does not assess esophageal motility or LES function. It is useful for staging complications (megaesophagus, aspiration) but cannot diagnose the functional disorder itself. **C. NCCT** — NCCT, like CECT, is a morphological imaging modality that shows structural changes (dilated esophagus, narrowed GE junction) but provides no functional data. It cannot measure sphincter pressure or peristalsis, and is therefore not diagnostic for achalasia. ## High-Yield Facts - **Achalasia diagnosis**: Barium swallow shows 'bird's beak' at GE junction + dilated esophagus; manometry confirms with elevated LES pressure (>45 mmHg) + absent peristalsis. - **Gold standard for achalasia**: **Esophageal manometry** (high-resolution or conventional) is the functional gold standard; barium swallow is morphological only. - **Chicago Classification v3.0**: Used to classify achalasia and differentiate from other motility disorders (diffuse esophageal spasm, ineffective motility) on HRM. - **Pseudoachalasia red flags**: Age >50, short symptom duration, weight loss, malignancy history—endoscopy + manometry both needed to exclude malignancy. - **Indian DOC for achalasia**: Pneumatic dilation (first-line in India), POEM, or laparoscopic Heller myotomy; diagnosis must be confirmed by manometry before intervention. ## Mnemonics **ACHALASIA = Absent Contraction + High LES pressure + Absent peristalsis + Loss of relaxation** Manometry shows: (1) High resting LES pressure, (2) Incomplete LES relaxation (<75% drop), (3) Absent/ineffective esophageal body peristalsis. This is what manometry detects—imaging cannot. **BARIUM shows anatomy; MANOMETRY shows function** Remember: Barium = morphology (bird's beak, dilation); Manometry = physiology (pressure, relaxation, peristalsis). For achalasia diagnosis, you need the physiology. ## NBE Trap NBE often pairs barium swallow findings with endoscopy as a trap, because both are commonly ordered in dysphagia workup. However, endoscopy is a screening/exclusion tool (rule out malignancy), not diagnostic for achalasia. The key discriminator is that achalasia is a **functional disorder** requiring manometry, not a structural one visible on imaging or endoscopy. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian practice, a patient with dysphagia and barium swallow showing bird's beak is presumed achalasia, but manometry is mandatory before pneumatic dilation to confirm diagnosis and assess LES pressure (guides dilation force). Missing manometry risks treating pseudoachalasia (e.g., gastric cancer) as primary achalasia, delaying cancer diagnosis. _Reference: Harrison Ch. 289 (Disorders of Esophageal Motility); Robbins Ch. 15 (GI Pathology); KD Tripathi Ch. 42 (GI Pharmacology—achalasia management)_
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