Literature DB >> 26221791

Female Adolescent Presenting With Abdominal Pain: Accidental Wire Bristle Ingestion Leading to Colonic Perforation.

Matthew Di Guglielmo1, Jillian Savage, Sharon Gould, Stephen Murphy.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Abdominal pain in female adolescents is a common presentation to both the emergency department and the outpatient pediatric clinic. The broad differential diagnosis for abdominal pain requires a high index of suspicion to make an accurate diagnosis of foreign body ingestion as the etiology. Foreign body ingestion occurs in all age groups, but sequelae of gastrointestinal tract perforation in children are rare. Treatment for perforation requires consultation of the pediatric general surgeon. Clinicians should take care to not overlook subtle imaging findings or dietary/exposure history, even in the context of a patient with known history of abdominal pain. CASE REPORT/TECHNIQUE DESCRIPTION: We report the accidental ingestion of a wire bristle from a grill cleaning brush by a female adolescent. The patient, previously treated and seen for constipation and irritable bowel syndrome in the outpatient gastroenterology clinic, was referred to the emergency department after identification of a foreign body on abdominal radiography. Emergency department physicians discovered the history of grilling and consumption of grilled food, facilitating diagnosis of a wire bristle as the foreign body. The metallic foreign body had migrated to the colon, where it perforated and lodged into the abdominal wall, causing acute, focal symptoms. Observation in the hospital with pain control and infection management allowed for elective laparoscopy. The surgical team removed the object with minimal morbidity and avoided laparotomy. DISCUSSION: Reports of unintended ingestion of wire bristles have been increasingly reported in the literature; however, most focus on injury to the upper airway or upper digestive tract and subsequent endoscopic or laryngoscopic removal. Most reports detail injury in adult patients, pediatric case reports with digestive tract injury are uncommon, and foreign body removal after lower digestive tract injury in children from a wire bristle has not been reported. We caution pediatric emergency medicine and ambulatory providers to consider such an ingestion and perforation in the differential diagnosis of acute-onset, focal, and localizable abdominal pain in children.

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Year:  2017        PMID: 26221791     DOI: 10.1097/PEC.0000000000000531

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pediatr Emerg Care        ISSN: 0749-5161            Impact factor:   1.454


  3 in total

1.  At-a-glance - Sentinel surveillance of emergency department presentations for barbecue brush-related injuries: the electronic Canadian Hospitals Injury Reporting and Prevention Program, 2011 to 2017.

Authors:  Deepa P Rao; Minh T Do; Jennifer Crain; Steven McFaull; Rebecca Stranberg; Teresa Mersereau; Wendy Thompson
Journal:  Health Promot Chronic Dis Prev Can       Date:  2017-10       Impact factor: 3.240

2.  Grill Brush Bristle Case Series: Three Unique Presentations of Ingested Foreign Bodies.

Authors:  Rachel Appelbaum; Thomas Nowakowski; Angie Zhang; Paul B Cesanek; Scott Beman; T Daniel Harrison
Journal:  Am J Case Rep       Date:  2019-08-12

3.  Rare hydrosalpinx in a sexually inactive adolescent successfully treated with laparoscopy.

Authors:  Masumi Takeda; Takashi Miyatake; Asuka Tanaka; Serika Kanao; Ai Miyoshi; Mayuko Mimura; Masaaki Nagamatsu; Takeshi Yokoi
Journal:  Gynecol Minim Invasive Ther       Date:  2016-09-21
  3 in total

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