Pulmonary manifestations masquerading a longstanding neglected metallic foreign body in the esophagus of a paediatric patient from Tanzania: Rare case report
Paediatric foreign body (FB) ingestion remains to be a common encounter in otorhinolaryngology and may manifest with pulmonary manifestations. Pulmonary manifestations masquerading chronic esophageal FBs in children is rare in clinical practice. This is perhaps the first documented case in Tanzania....
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Veröffentlicht in: | International journal of surgery case reports 2023-09, Vol.110, p.108683, Article 108683 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Paediatric foreign body (FB) ingestion remains to be a common encounter in otorhinolaryngology and may manifest with pulmonary manifestations. Pulmonary manifestations masquerading chronic esophageal FBs in children is rare in clinical practice. This is perhaps the first documented case in Tanzania.
The patient was a 6-year old boy with a 6-month history of ingesting a metallic object. The child was reported to have presented with sudden onset of drooling of saliva and difficulty in swallowing that lasted for several hours. While preparing to visit a hospital, no more drooling of saliva was noted thus the visit was cancelled. A month later the patient presented with recurrent episodes of dry cough associated with wheezing and unresponsive to medical treatment. Upon attending other health facilities no chest X-ray was ordered but rather prescribed antibiotics, mucolytics, antihistamines and antileukotrienes without relief.
Chest x-ray was indicated and revealed an esophageal metallic object. Rigid esophagoscopy under general anaesthesia yielded the rusted metallic object in piece meals. Postoperative antibiotic, analgesic and an oral corticosteroid were prescribed. Postoperative visits were uneventful.
The patient underwent esophagoscopy and the rusted` metallic object was extracted in piece meals. Postoperative antibiotic, analgesic and oral corticosteroid were prescribed. Postoperative visits were uneventful.
It is always important to suspect FB ingestion in a child with a history of sudden onset of drooling of saliva and difficulty in swallowing. Imaging should be advocated to avoid delayed diagnosis otherwise pulmonary manifestations can masquerade the diagnosis of chronic esophageal FBs.
•Ingestion of a foreign body is a common encounter in otorhinolaryngology practice in children.•A missed esophageal foreign body may present with pulmonary manifestations.•Pulmonary manifestations may masquerade a chronic retained esophageal foreign body.•Imaging remains to be important in patients with chronic cough.•Esophagoscopy is the treatment of choice in extraction of esophageal foreign bodies. |
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ISSN: | 2210-2612 2210-2612 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.ijscr.2023.108683 |