Aspirated foreign body
Revision as of 02:05, 11 September 2016 by ClaireLewis (talk | contribs) (Created page with "==Background== *Most common in young children (1-3 years old) *Consider in any child with respiratory symptoms *Object can be lodged in upper airway (20% of cases) or bronchus...")
Background
- Most common in young children (1-3 years old)
- Consider in any child with respiratory symptoms
- Object can be lodged in upper airway (20% of cases) or bronchus (80%)
Clinical Features
- History of eating or handling a small object (or being unsupervised near one) followed by sudden onset coughing, dyspnea
- Onset of respiratory symptoms may sometimes be delayed >24 hours
- Dyspnea, tachypnea, respiratory distress, hypoxia
- Sudden collapse, cardiac arrest
- Cough, gagging
- Stridor, dysphonia (if stuck at level of larynx)
- Wheezing, decreased breath sounds (If lower airway)
- Wheezing not responsive to bronchodilators
- Fever, pneumonia symptoms if retained
Differential Diagnosis
Evaluation
- CXR
- Useful to confirm diagnosis, does not rule out
- Negative in >50% of tracheal foreign bodies, 25% of bronchial foreign bodies[1], and may be missed if very small and/or radiopaque
- Inspiratory/expiratory films may show relative hyperinflation proximal to obstruction on end-expiration
Management
Complete Airway Obstruction
- If conscious: Heimlich maneuver, chest thrusts (obese or pregnant patients), back-blow/chest thrust (infants)
- If object visible, remove manually (don't push it further into airway!)
- Laryngoscopy, remove visualized object with Magill forceps
- If unsuccessful, bag-valve mask or intubate (may dislodge object and improve situation to partial or more distal obstruction)
- If unable to intubate, may need cricothyrotomy (though will not help if obstruction distal to cricothyroid)
Partial Obstruction
- Supplemental O2
- Allow patient to assume position of comfort
- Monitor closely
- May need rigid bronchoscopy to remove
- Consider consulting ENT, anesthesia (inhalational induction will decrease risk of pushing foreign body into harder-to-reach area)
- Post-removal: consider dexamethasone, bronchodilators and/or racemic epinephrine, and antibiotics for pneumonia
Disposition
See Also
- Respiratory distress
- Stridor
- PALS (Main), Newborn resuscitation
- Difficult airway algorithm, Airway sizes (peds)
- Aspiration pneumonia and pneumonitis
- Esophageal foreign body, Nasal foreign body
External Links
References
- ↑ Zerella JT, Dimler M, McGill LC, Pippus KJ: Foreign body aspiration in children: value of radiography and complications of bronchoscopy. J Pediatr Surg 33: 1651, 1998.
