P Campisi1, S B Backman, R Sweet. 1. Department of Otolaryngology, Royal Victoria Hospital and McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Aspiration of a foreign body may be life-threatening. This report describes laryngeal obstruction after inhalation of a piece of a Turbuhaler which resulted from a patient tampering with the device. CLINICAL FEATURES: A 27-yr-old man disassembled a Turbuhaler and inadvertently aspirated a plastic dispensing medication disc (22 mm diameter) while attempting to inhale the remnant terbutaline sulfate which accumulated on it. Although the patient was hoarse, he was not in acute respiratory distress. X-ray revealed the disc lodged in the larynx below the vocal cords. The patient was immediately transferred to an operating theatre, and a drying agent (glycopyrrolate), judicious sedation (midazolam and fentanyl) and O2 were administered. The airway was anesthetized with lidocaine 4% delivered using high-flow O2 through an atomizer. Direct laryngoscopy revealed a partially obstructed view of the disc lodged distal to the vocal cords which was inaccessible for retrieval. Loss of consciousness was subsequently induced by spontaneous mask ventilation with sevoflurane (in O2). The airway was visualized using a suspension laryngoscope and the foreign body was removed with grasping forceps. The patient was awakened, transferred to the ICU and given 4 mg decadron i.v. every eight hours (two doses). Laryngoscopy prior to discharge indicated good mobility of the vocal cords and normal glottic structure. CONCLUSION: Aspiration of a foreign body is a potentially life-threatening situation requiring coordination between anesthesiologist, surgeon, and nursing staff. Anesthetic goals include avoidance of upper airway obstruction and maintenance of adequate ventilation while the foreign body is retrieved. Provisions must be made for tracheostomy if these goals cannot be realized.
PURPOSE: Aspiration of a foreign body may be life-threatening. This report describes laryngeal obstruction after inhalation of a piece of a Turbuhaler which resulted from a patient tampering with the device. CLINICAL FEATURES: A 27-yr-old man disassembled a Turbuhaler and inadvertently aspirated a plastic dispensing medication disc (22 mm diameter) while attempting to inhale the remnant terbutaline sulfate which accumulated on it. Although the patient was hoarse, he was not in acute respiratory distress. X-ray revealed the disc lodged in the larynx below the vocal cords. The patient was immediately transferred to an operating theatre, and a drying agent (glycopyrrolate), judicious sedation (midazolam and fentanyl) and O2 were administered. The airway was anesthetized with lidocaine 4% delivered using high-flow O2 through an atomizer. Direct laryngoscopy revealed a partially obstructed view of the disc lodged distal to the vocal cords which was inaccessible for retrieval. Loss of consciousness was subsequently induced by spontaneous mask ventilation with sevoflurane (in O2). The airway was visualized using a suspension laryngoscope and the foreign body was removed with grasping forceps. The patient was awakened, transferred to the ICU and given 4 mg decadron i.v. every eight hours (two doses). Laryngoscopy prior to discharge indicated good mobility of the vocal cords and normal glottic structure. CONCLUSION: Aspiration of a foreign body is a potentially life-threatening situation requiring coordination between anesthesiologist, surgeon, and nursing staff. Anesthetic goals include avoidance of upper airway obstruction and maintenance of adequate ventilation while the foreign body is retrieved. Provisions must be made for tracheostomy if these goals cannot be realized.