Oesophageal food impaction is a sudden medical situation that occurs when food becomes stuck in the tube that connects your mouth to your stomach. While many cases resolve on their own, some require urgent medical attention to prevent complications and restore your ability to swallow normally.
Epidemiology
Oesophageal food impaction is a relatively common emergency that affects people across different age groups. According to research data from a health maintenance organization population, the condition occurs at an estimated rate of approximately 13 cases per 100,000 people each year. This makes it the third most common non-biliary gastrointestinal emergency requiring medical attention.[1][2]
The incidence of oesophageal food impaction has been increasing over time, particularly from the mid-1970s through the early 2000s. Data from Olmsted County, Minnesota showed that cases peaked at 23.2 per year during the period between 2000 and 2004. This rising trend appears to coincide with the emergence and increased recognition of certain underlying oesophageal conditions.[6]
Men are more commonly affected than women by this condition. Studies have documented a male-to-female ratio of approximately 1.7 to 1, meaning that for every woman who experiences food impaction, nearly two men will have the same problem. In one retrospective study examining 174 patients with endoscopically confirmed food impaction, 58.6% were male. The condition becomes more frequent with advancing age, particularly in individuals over seventy years old.[5][14]
Causes
Oesophageal food impaction occurs when food becomes lodged in the oesophagus, which is the muscular tube that carries food from your throat to your stomach. Unlike choking, where food enters the windpipe and blocks breathing, food impaction affects only the food pipe, allowing you to continue breathing and speaking normally.[1]
The immediate trigger for food impaction is typically consuming large pieces of food that have not been chewed adequately. Meat is the most common culprit, with beef, chicken, and pork being the foods most frequently reported to cause blockages. This phenomenon has earned colorful names in medical literature, including “steakhouse syndrome” and “backyard barbecue syndrome,” reflecting the typical settings where these incidents occur. Other foods that can cause impaction include hot dogs, al dente-cooked vegetables, and in children, small round foods like grapes, peanuts, and candies.[1][4]
However, most people who experience food impaction have an underlying oesophageal problem that makes them susceptible to this condition. Research indicates that between 88% and 97% of adults with food impaction have some form of oesophageal pathology. These underlying issues can be either mechanical, meaning there is a physical narrowing of the oesophagus, or functional, meaning the muscles of the oesophagus do not work properly.[2]
Mechanical causes of narrowing include several different conditions. A Schatzki ring is one of the most common causes—this is a circular band of tissue in the lower oesophagus that creates a narrowed area. Peptic strictures, which are scarred, narrowed areas resulting from long-standing acid reflux, also frequently lead to food impaction. Eosinophilic oesophagitis has emerged as an increasingly recognized cause; this is an inflammatory condition where certain white blood cells accumulate in the oesophageal wall, causing swelling and narrowing. Other mechanical causes include oesophageal webs, tumors (both benign and cancerous), and external compression from blood vessels or previous surgery.[1][3][4]
Functional causes involve problems with how the oesophageal muscles coordinate swallowing. Conditions such as achalasia, where the lower oesophageal sphincter fails to relax properly, or diffuse oesophageal spasm, where the muscles contract in an uncoordinated manner, can cause food to become temporarily trapped. In these cases, the food often passes on its own once the muscles relax and normal coordination returns.[1][3]
Risk Factors
Several factors increase the likelihood of experiencing oesophageal food impaction. The most significant risk factor is having an underlying oesophageal condition that narrows the passage or affects its function. People with chronic acid reflux disease are at increased risk because long-standing reflux can lead to scarring and stricture formation in the lower oesophagus.[10]
Eosinophilic oesophagitis has become an increasingly important risk factor. This inflammatory condition creates multiple abnormalities in the oesophagus, including rings, narrowing, and stiffness of the oesophageal wall, all of which predispose to food becoming stuck. When patients with eosinophilic oesophagitis experience food impaction, they require careful management because their condition increases the risk of complications during treatment.[4]
Eating habits play a substantial role in the risk of food impaction. Eating too quickly without taking time to chew food thoroughly is a common contributing factor. This often happens in social settings like restaurants or barbecues where people are distracted by conversation. The use of alcohol during meals can impair coordination and reduce awareness of how well food is being chewed before swallowing.[1]
Poor dental health significantly increases risk. People with missing teeth, cavities, or ill-fitting dentures cannot effectively break down food before swallowing, making it more likely that large pieces will enter the oesophagus. Elderly individuals are particularly vulnerable because they may have both dental problems and age-related changes in oesophageal function.[1]
Having previously experienced a food impaction suggests an underlying problem and indicates increased risk for future episodes. In one study, individuals who had experienced food impaction were found to have endoscopic abnormalities in a significant majority of cases, ranging from strictures and rings to inflammation and hiatal hernias.[14]
Children face unique risks. Infants and toddlers do not have fully developed coordination between their mouth, throat, and oesophagus. They are prone to swallowing small, round foods whole—such as grapes, hard candies, or peanuts—which can become lodged. Young children also commonly swallow non-food objects out of curiosity, which can become impacted in the oesophagus.[3]
Certain medical conditions may also contribute to risk. Diabetes mellitus was reported in 11.4% of patients with food impaction in one study, suggesting a possible association, though more research is needed to understand this relationship fully. Some neurological conditions that affect swallowing coordination or cognitive impairments that affect eating behavior can also increase risk.[14]
Symptoms
People experiencing oesophageal food impaction typically recognize the problem immediately. The symptoms appear suddenly, usually during or shortly after eating. The most prominent symptom is acute dysphagia, which means sudden difficulty swallowing. Patients feel as though the food has stopped moving and is stuck somewhere in their chest.[3][4]
A squeezing or pressure sensation in the chest is common and can be quite uncomfortable. This feeling is located behind the breastbone, in an area called the retrosternal space. Because this sensation can mimic heart attack pain, many patients become frightened and worried about their heart. However, food impaction is additionally accompanied by other distinctive symptoms that help distinguish it from cardiac problems.[1][3]
Excessive salivation, known medically as sialorrhea, is a hallmark sign of oesophageal obstruction. Your body continues to produce saliva, but with the oesophagus blocked, you cannot swallow it down. This leads to drooling or the need to repeatedly spit out saliva. Many patients describe feeling unable to swallow anything further, including liquids or even their own secretions.[1][2]
Regurgitation of food is another common symptom. This is different from vomiting—it is the effortless return of undigested food from the oesophagus back into the mouth. Some patients may vomit, while others experience repeated gagging or dry heaving as their body attempts to clear the obstruction. The regurgitated material may be mixed with saliva and appear frothy.[2][3]
Pain can manifest in different ways. Some people experience sharp pain with swallowing, called odynophagia, while others feel a more constant ache or fullness in the neck or chest. The location of discomfort may give clues about where the food is stuck, though this is not always reliable.[3][4]
A sensation of something being lodged in the throat, sometimes described as a “globus sensation,” may persist even if no food is actually stuck there. This can occur when food has scratched the oesophageal lining without becoming lodged, creating a lingering feeling of obstruction.[2][3]
Anxiety and hyperventilation are common reactions to the frightening sensation of food being stuck. This rapid breathing can make patients appear to be in respiratory distress. However, true breathing difficulty—such as being unable to speak, coughing that produces no sound, wheezing, or developing a blue color to the lips or skin—strongly suggests that the foreign body is in the airway rather than the oesophagus and represents a life-threatening choking emergency.[3]
The severity of symptoms can vary depending on whether the blockage is partial or complete. With partial obstruction, patients may still be able to swallow liquids or at least their saliva, though with difficulty. Complete obstruction is poorly tolerated, with patients unable to swallow anything at all and experiencing more severe discomfort.[3]
Prevention
Preventing oesophageal food impaction involves both addressing underlying medical conditions and adopting safer eating practices. For people who have experienced food impaction before, preventing recurrence requires identifying and treating the root cause.[14]
Managing underlying oesophageal conditions is the most important preventive measure. People with chronic acid reflux should work with their healthcare provider to control their symptoms through medication and lifestyle changes. Treating reflux disease can prevent the development of peptic strictures that increase impaction risk. Those diagnosed with eosinophilic oesophagitis benefit from treatment with medications that reduce oesophageal inflammation, though this is an emerging area of medicine requiring specialist care.[4]
Proper chewing is fundamental to prevention. Taking the time to chew food thoroughly before swallowing ensures that pieces are small enough to pass easily through the oesophagus. This is particularly important with fibrous meats and firm vegetables. Eating slowly and mindfully, rather than rushing through meals, allows for better chewing and reduces the likelihood of swallowing large pieces.[1]
Limiting alcohol consumption during meals can help maintain proper eating coordination and awareness. Alcohol can reduce the attention paid to chewing and may impair the normal swallowing mechanism.[1]
Good dental health is essential for proper food preparation before swallowing. Regular dental care, treatment of cavities, and ensuring that dentures fit properly all contribute to the ability to chew food effectively. Elderly individuals should pay particular attention to maintaining dental health or obtaining well-fitted dentures.[1]
For children, prevention focuses on appropriate food choices and supervision. Young children should not be given small, round, hard foods that they might swallow whole. Foods like grapes should be cut into smaller pieces. Toddlers should always be supervised during meals, and they should be taught to sit down while eating rather than running or playing with food in their mouths.[3]
Parents should also keep small objects that might be swallowed out of reach of young children. Coins, small batteries, and small toys pose risks not only of impaction but potentially of more serious injury if they contain harmful materials.[3]
For people who have had oesophageal narrowing treated with dilation (a procedure to widen the oesophagus), following up with regular monitoring can help detect recurrent narrowing before it leads to impaction. Some patients with severe narrowing may benefit from repeated dilation procedures to maintain an adequate passage for food.[14]
Being aware of early warning signs can also help prevent full impaction. If you notice increasing difficulty swallowing solid foods or a sensation that food is moving slowly through your chest, consulting a healthcare provider before a complete impaction occurs allows for evaluation and treatment of underlying problems.[4]
Pathophysiology
Understanding what happens in the body during oesophageal food impaction requires knowledge of normal swallowing physiology. Swallowing is a complex, coordinated process involving multiple involuntary muscle movements. When you eat, your tongue first pushes food to the back of your throat. At this point, a flap of cartilage called the epiglottis closes over your windpipe to prevent food from entering your airways. Simultaneously, a muscular ring called the upper oesophageal sphincter relaxes, allowing food to enter the oesophagus.[12]
Once in the oesophagus, food is propelled downward by coordinated muscular contractions called peristalsis. These wave-like contractions push food toward the stomach. At the bottom of the oesophagus, another muscular ring called the lower oesophageal sphincter relaxes to allow food to enter the stomach, then contracts again to prevent stomach contents from flowing backward.[1]
Food impaction occurs when this process is interrupted. The oesophagus has several points where it naturally narrows or where external structures create relative narrowing. These include the area where the upper oesophageal sphincter is located, the point where the aorta (the body’s main artery) crosses the oesophagus, the area where the left main bronchus (an airway branch) crosses, and the lower oesophageal sphincter region. Foreign bodies, including food, most commonly lodge at these physiologic narrowing points.[2][3]
When pathologic narrowing exists—such as from a Schatzki ring, stricture, or inflammation—the impaction typically occurs at that location. A Schatzki ring creates a shelf-like narrowing in the lower oesophagus where food can catch. Peptic strictures result from chronic acid exposure causing inflammation, healing, and scarring that contracts and narrows the oesophageal lumen over time.[1][4]
In eosinophilic oesophagitis, the pathophysiology is more complex. Large numbers of eosinophils (a type of white blood cell) infiltrate the oesophageal wall, causing swelling and inflammation. Over time, this leads to remodeling of the oesophageal tissue, loss of normal elasticity, and the formation of rings or strictures. The oesophagus becomes stiff and unable to stretch to accommodate food boluses, making impaction more likely.[4]
In motility disorders, the problem lies not with physical narrowing but with the coordination of muscular contractions. In conditions like achalasia, the lower oesophageal sphincter fails to relax properly, creating a functional obstruction. In diffuse oesophageal spasm, uncoordinated contractions can temporarily trap a food bolus until normal coordinated peristalsis resumes.[1][4]
Once food becomes impacted, several physiological responses occur. The oesophagus continues to produce muscular contractions in an attempt to move the food, which contributes to the chest discomfort patients feel. Salivary glands continue producing saliva, but with the oesophagus blocked, this saliva cannot be swallowed and accumulates in the mouth. The presence of food in the oesophagus can trigger nausea and vomiting reflexes as the body attempts to clear the obstruction.[3]
If food remains impacted for an extended period, complications can develop. Pressure from the impacted food can cause injury to the oesophageal lining, ranging from superficial erosions to deeper ulceration. In severe cases, pressure necrosis (tissue death from prolonged pressure) can occur. Even a smooth food bolus, if tightly impacted, creates risk for perforation (a hole through the oesophageal wall) if it remains in place for more than about 24 hours. Perforation is a serious complication that can lead to infection in the chest and requires emergency treatment.[3][6]
The type of food involved influences the pathophysiology. Meat fibers are particularly problematic because they are tough and fibrous, making them difficult for the oesophagus to break down or move. Unlike some softer foods that might break apart or be regurgitated, meat often remains intact and firmly lodged.[11]
Many food impactions resolve spontaneously without intervention. The oesophagus may eventually generate enough force to push the food forward into the stomach, or relaxation of spasm may allow passage. Alternatively, the patient may regurgitate or vomit, expelling the impacted food. However, when symptoms persist or are severe, intervention becomes necessary to prevent complications.[1]


