Esophageal Button Battery Retrieval: Time-In May Not Be Everything

The management of ingested foreign bodies is a challenging task because each case is unique with multiple varying factors including a patient's age, anatomical considerations, clinical presentation, and the type and location of the foreign body ingested. Additionally, concern over complications...

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Veröffentlicht in:Curēus (Palo Alto, CA) CA), 2024-04, Vol.16 (4), p.e58327
Hauptverfasser: Bhumi, Sriya, Mago, Sheena, Mavilia-Scranton, Marianna G, Birk, John W, Rezaizadeh, Houman
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container_title Curēus (Palo Alto, CA)
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creator Bhumi, Sriya
Mago, Sheena
Mavilia-Scranton, Marianna G
Birk, John W
Rezaizadeh, Houman
description The management of ingested foreign bodies is a challenging task because each case is unique with multiple varying factors including a patient's age, anatomical considerations, clinical presentation, and the type and location of the foreign body ingested. Additionally, concern over complications associated with button battery ingestion typically drives management decisions. The common practice is the urgent retrieval of the foreign body within two to six hours of presentation. An unusual case is presented here that demonstrated significantly delayed endoscopic removal of an ingested button battery without complication, avoiding the many risks associated with any emergent endoscopic procedure. However, this practice is a case-by-case decision because there is a lack of literature to guide the current management.
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subjects Abdomen
Emergency Medicine
Endoscopy
Esophagus
Foreign bodies
Gastroenterology
Hepatology
Internal Medicine
Patients
title Esophageal Button Battery Retrieval: Time-In May Not Be Everything
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