A 67-year-old gentleman of Chinese ethnicity presented with a 6-month history of worsening dysphagia, initially with solids, followed by liquids, resulting in poor oral intake. He denies coughing or choking while swallowing. He smoked 20-pack years of cigarettes and stopped 6 months prior to presentation. There was significant weight loss of 30 kg in 6 months associated with lethargy.An oesophagodeudonoscopy at the fourth month revealed mild oesophagitis with a grade three (Type I) hiatus hernia. He was treated with proton pump inhibitors, but the dysphagia worsened. A flexible laryngoscopy revealed unremarkable true and false cords, with no pooling of saliva or evidence of aspiration. He underwent a barium swallow to rule out a mechanical cause.During the barium swallow, he was aspirating silently, with significant amounts of barium contrast in his right bronchus (Fig. 1). The study was halted immediately, and the patient was propped up, with vigorous suctioning. There was no evidence of oxygen desaturation.