Coin ingestion
Revision as of 11:57, 13 March 2026 by Ostermayer (talk | contribs) (Created page with "==Background== *Coins are the '''most commonly ingested foreign body''' in children, accounting for the majority of pediatric foreign body ingestion ED visits<ref name="naspghan">Kramer RE, Lerner DG, Lin T, et al. Management of ingested foreign bodies in children: a clinical report of the NASPGHAN Endoscopy Committee. ''J Pediatr Gastroenterol Nutr''. 2015;60(4):562-574. PMID 25611037.</ref> *Peak age: '''6 months to 3 years''' (exploratory mouthing behavior) *The vast...")
Background
- Coins are the most commonly ingested foreign body in children, accounting for the majority of pediatric foreign body ingestion ED visits[1]
- Peak age: 6 months to 3 years (exploratory mouthing behavior)
- The vast majority of ingested coins pass through the GI tract spontaneously without complication
- Coins that reach the stomach have a > 95% chance of passing without intervention[2]
- The primary concern is esophageal impaction, which occurs in approximately 10–20% of pediatric coin ingestions[3]
- Esophageal impaction most commonly occurs at one of three anatomic narrowings:
- Upper esophageal sphincter (cricopharyngeus) — most common site (~70%)
- Aortic arch / carina level (mid-esophagus)
- Lower esophageal sphincter (GE junction)
- Serious complications from coin ingestion (perforation, fistula, obstruction) are extremely rare but can occur with prolonged esophageal impaction[1]
- Critical distinction: Coins must be differentiated from button batteries on radiograph — batteries require emergent removal, coins generally do not
- Adult coin ingestions are uncommon and raise concern for underlying esophageal pathology (stricture, eosinophilic esophagitis, Schatzki ring) or psychiatric/developmental conditions
Clinical Features
Asymptomatic (Most Common)
- Many coin ingestions, particularly those past the esophagus, are completely asymptomatic
- Parents may witness the ingestion or find a coin is missing
- The child may be entirely well-appearing with a normal exam
Esophageal Impaction
- Dysphagia, odynophagia
- Drooling, refusal to eat or drink
- Vomiting or gagging
- Chest pain, neck pain, throat discomfort ("something stuck")
- Irritability, fussiness (nonverbal children)
- Cough, stridor, or wheezing (compression of the posterior membranous trachea by a proximal esophageal coin)
Post-Esophageal (Gastric / Intestinal)
- Typically asymptomatic
- Rare: abdominal pain, vomiting if coin causes gastric outlet obstruction or fails to pass a fixed anatomic narrowing (e.g. pylorus, ileocecal valve, prior surgical site)
Delayed / Missed Ingestion
- Chronic cough, recurrent wheezing, or feeding difficulties may be the only presentation if the ingestion was unwitnessed
- Consider coin (or other foreign body) in any child with unexplained respiratory or feeding symptoms[2]
Differential Diagnosis
- Button battery ingestion — must be excluded radiographically before observation (see Diagnosis for distinguishing features)
- Other foreign body ingestion (magnets, small toys, jewelry)
- Food bolus impaction
- Epiglottitis, Croup (if airway symptoms)
- GERD, eosinophilic esophagitis
- Esophageal Stricture
- Retropharyngeal abscess (if neck pain, drooling, refusal to eat)
- Swallowed magnets (single magnet = low risk; multiple magnets = surgical emergency)
Evaluation
Workup
- AP and lateral radiographs of the neck, chest, and abdomen — standard of care for all suspected coin ingestions[1]
- Coins are radiopaque and readily identified
- Must image from nasopharynx to rectum if location is uncertain
- Labs: Generally NOT needed for uncomplicated coin ingestion
- Obtain CBC, BMP, type and screen if there is concern for perforation, hemorrhage, or the patient requires procedural sedation/general anesthesia for removal
Diagnosis
- Coin vs. Button Battery on X-ray:
| Feature | Coin | Button Battery |
|---|---|---|
| AP view | Single uniform disc; no double ring | "Double ring" / "halo" sign (step-off between anode and cathode layers) |
| Lateral view | Uniformly thin | Step-off (one side wider than the other) |
| Orientation in esophagus | Coronal (flat face toward AP viewer — appears round on AP) | Also coronal in esophagus |
- If the object cannot be definitively identified as a coin, manage as a button battery until proven otherwise
- Coin orientation helps localize:
- Esophagus: Coin is oriented in the coronal plane (appears round on AP view, thin line on lateral)
- Trachea: Coin is oriented in the sagittal plane (appears thin on AP, round on lateral) — indicates aspiration rather than ingestion
- Identify the exact location: Esophagus vs. stomach vs. beyond — this determines management
Consider Underlying Pathology
- Recurrent esophageal coin impaction or food impaction → workup for eosinophilic esophagitis, esophageal stricture, vascular ring, or other anatomic abnormality[1]
- Adult with esophageal coin impaction → underlying pathology is very likely
Management
Esophageal Coin
- Proximal esophagus (cricopharyngeus):
- Endoscopic removal is recommended — urgent (within 24 hours)[1]
- Some centers perform removal sooner (within 12–16 hours) if the coin has been lodged for an unknown duration
- Mid or distal esophagus in an asymptomatic child:
- A brief observation period of 12–24 hours to allow spontaneous passage into the stomach is reasonable[3]
- 65% of mid/distal esophageal coins pass spontaneously within 12–24 hours[3]
- Repeat radiograph at 12–24 hours; if coin has not passed → endoscopic removal
- Do NOT observe if the child is symptomatic, if the duration of impaction is unknown, or if the child has prior esophageal pathology
- Removal techniques:
- Endoscopy: Preferred method — allows direct mucosal inspection and treatment of concurrent pathology (e.g. eosinophilic esophagitis biopsies)[1]
- Foley catheter technique: Fluoroscopically guided balloon catheter passed beyond the coin, inflated, and withdrawn to pull the coin out. Used at some centers for recently impacted (< 24 hours), smooth, round coins in proximal esophagus of otherwise healthy children with no prior esophageal pathology. Controversial; risk of aspiration; not universally endorsed
- Bougienage (coin advancement): Esophageal bougie is used to push the coin into the stomach. Used at some centers for distal esophageal coins. Also controversial; no mucosal inspection possible
- NPO in anticipation of procedural sedation/anesthesia for removal
Gastric Coin
- Observation is the standard of care — the vast majority pass spontaneously[2]
- No specific dietary modification required; normal diet
- Parents should monitor stools for coin passage (though this is often missed)
- Repeat radiograph:
- Some guidelines suggest repeat imaging only if the coin has not passed within 2–4 weeks[1]
- Earlier repeat imaging (at 1–2 weeks) may be considered for larger coins or younger children
- Endoscopic removal if:
- Coin remains in the stomach > 2–4 weeks
- Patient becomes symptomatic (abdominal pain, vomiting, hematemesis)
Post-Gastric (Intestinal) Coin
- No intervention needed — will pass in stool
- Return precautions for abdominal pain, vomiting, bloody stools
Airway (Aspirated Coin)
- Emergent bronchoscopy — coin in the trachea or bronchus requires immediate removal
- Identified by sagittal orientation on AP radiograph
Disposition
- Discharge home:
- Asymptomatic child with coin confirmed in the stomach or beyond on radiograph
- Provide written return precautions: vomiting, abdominal pain, bloody stool, refusal to eat, fever
- Follow-up radiograph in 2–4 weeks if passage is not confirmed
- Discharge home with planned follow-up (12–24 hours):
- Asymptomatic child with coin in mid or distal esophagus being observed for spontaneous passage
- Must have reliable parents/caregivers and ability to return promptly
- Repeat imaging in 12–24 hours; return immediately if symptoms develop
- Admit / procedural intervention:
- Symptomatic esophageal coin requiring endoscopic removal
- Proximal esophageal coin (unlikely to pass spontaneously)
- Coin that fails to pass after 12–24 hour observation period
- Coin in the trachea (emergent bronchoscopy)
- Any concern for button battery rather than coin → treat as battery
- Referral to GI:
- Recurrent esophageal foreign body impaction (evaluate for eosinophilic esophagitis, stricture)
- Gastric coin persisting > 2–4 weeks
See Also
- Button battery ingestion
- Foreign body ingestion
- Esophageal foreign body
- Magnet ingestion
- Esophageal food impaction
- Pediatric foreign body
External Links
- Management of Ingested Foreign Bodies in Children - NASPGHAN/ESPGHAN 2015
- Randomized clinical trial of management of esophageal coins in children - Pediatrics 2005
- Pediatric foreign body ingestion: complications and factors - Sci 2022
- National Capital Poison Center: Button Battery Triage and Treatment Guideline
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 Kramer RE, Lerner DG, Lin T, et al. Management of ingested foreign bodies in children: a clinical report of the NASPGHAN Endoscopy Committee. J Pediatr Gastroenterol Nutr. 2015;60(4):562-574. PMID 25611037.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 Conners GP. Pediatric foreign body ingestion: complications and patient and foreign body factors. Sci. 2022;4(2):20.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 Waltzman ML, Baskin M, Wypij D, et al. A randomized clinical trial of the management of esophageal coins in children. Pediatrics. 2005;116(3):614-619. PMID 16140700.
