“…The symptoms of esophageal compression consist of alterations in the swallowing of solids or liquids and are more frequent in older patients, whereas respiratory symptoms are predominant in infants. [9][10][11] The techniques traditionally used for the diagnosis of these anomalies have been esophagography, echocardiography, and angiography. Tracheoesophageal compression is both from left to right and anterior to posterior for a DAA, whereas it is fundamentally posterior if there is an aberrant left or right subclavian artery.…”