“…Esophageal perforation may manifest itself, intraoperatively with recognized injury or anytime from the early postoperative period to years later, with varied clinical presentation. [1][2][3][4][7][8][9] Most commonly patients presented with dysphagia and odynophagia in a literature review by Halani et al 2 Postoperatively, any patient presenting with neck swelling, persistent neck or throat pain, crepitus in the neck, wound leak, cervical abscess, fever, septicemia, mediastinitis, or unexplained fevers should alert the clinician to the possibility of esophageal perforation. 10,11 As dysphagia is the most common presenting symptom, any patient with difficulty in swallowing after an anterior surgical intervention to the cervical spine, even years later, should undergo a thorough workup for a possible esophageal perforation.…”