It is known that an acute postemetic injury may evoke a spontaneous rupture of the oesophagus. This spontaneous rupture may produce an intramural hematoma or a laceration of the oesophagus wall. The intramural hematoma is restricted to the esophageal wall and may produce a fistula into the lumen of the oesophagus (with creation of a double lumen) or into the mediastinum (haematoma of the mediastinum). On the other hand the rupture may extend from the mucosa (lesion of Mallory-Weiss) into the complete wall of the oesophagus (Boerhaave's Syndrome). There are reports on a lesion of the exterior muscular layer of the third distal half of the oesophagus, which had evoked an acute haemorrhage into the mediastinum and has been defined as a variant of Boerhaave's syndrome. We now describe a similar case which is confined to the cervical oesophagus and has been treated without surgical intervention.