| Literature DB >> 32550120 |
Soichi Shibuya1, Takahiro Azuma1, Geoffrey J Lane1, Manabu Okawada1, Atsuyuki Yamataka1.
Abstract
A 16-month-old boy was referred to our hospital for the management of suspected lithium button battery (LBB) ingestion. He had been previously well, but became febrile with a persistent cough resistant to oral antibiotics and dysphagia for 5 days. Radiography identified an LBB lodged in the upper esophagus. The LBB was retrieved under direct visualization with rigid laryngoscopy. He was sedated for 5 days and enteral feeding was commenced through a nasojejunal tube on the next day after procedure. On day 8 after retrieval, endoscopy and fluoroscopy identified a tracheoesophageal fistula (TEF), 6 mm in diameter. Conservative management was conducted with periodic follow-up endoscopies, which showed signs of healing in the esophagus. Following continuous antibiotics and proactive nutritional support, the TEF was found to have closed spontaneously by day 28 after the LBB removal. We present our experience of the successful nonsurgical management of acquired TEF secondary to LBB ingestion and aim to establish a protocol for managing it conservatively by reviewing the relevant literature.Entities:
Keywords: conservative treatment; foreign body ingestions; lithium button battery; mediastinitis; tracheoesophageal fistula
Year: 2020 PMID: 32550120 PMCID: PMC7156279 DOI: 10.1055/s-0040-1705157
Source DB: PubMed Journal: European J Pediatr Surg Rep ISSN: 2194-7619
Fig. 1Computed tomography showing focal air in the mediastinum suggesting esophageal perforation. ( A ) Axial image—The cathode side faced forward and the BB was tilted slightly clockwise. ( B ) Sagittal image—There was only 1cm between the BB and the Ao. ( C ) Mediastinal window, axial image—Arrowheads indicate focal air in the mediastinum. ( D ) Mediastinal window, sagittal image—Arrowheads indicate focal air in the mediastinum. Ao, aorta; BB, button battery; E, esophagus; T, trachea.
Fig. 2( A ) Fluoroscopy at the time of referral arrowheads indicated a lithium BB impacted the upper esophagus. ( B ) Contrast fluoroscopy on 8 days after retrieval. Arrowheads indicate contrast agent flowing into the trachea. ( C ) Flexible endoscopy on 15 days after retrieval. Flexible esophagostomy revealed TEF formation, 6 mm in diameter. ( D ) Endoscopy on 28 days after retrieval. Spontaneous closure of TEF was confirmed. E, esophagus; TEF, tracheoesophageal fistula.
Attempted conservative management of acquired TEF after accidental lithium button battery ingestion
| Authors published | Age at ingestion | Duration of ingestion | Diagnosis of acquired TEF | TEF size | Management | Duration of healing | Hospital Discharge | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Senthilkumaran et al 1996 | 5 mo | 12 d | Soon after removal | Unk | CV nutrition, NJ feeding | 6 wk | Unk | Unremarkable |
| Chiang and Chen 2000 | 20 mo | 3 d | On presentation | Unk | NJ and NG feeding, antibiotics, steroids | 11 wk | 4 wk | Unremarkable |
| Anand et al 2002 | 41 mo | 10 d | 1 d | Unk | NG drainage, NG feeding, antibiotics | 28 d | Unk | Unremarkable |
| Alkan et al 2004 | 16 mo | 3 d | 15 d | Unk | Gastrostomy, CV nutrition. antibiotics | Not closed | Unk | Subsequent surgery |
| Grisel et al 2008 | 3 y | 12 h | 12 d | 9 mm | GJ feeding, PPI | Recurrent after 80 d | Unk | Subsequent surgery |
| Russell et al 2013 | 11 mo | 6 h | 7 d | 7 mm | NG drainage, NG feeding, antibiotics | 1 mo | 53 d | Unremarkable |
| The present case | 16 mo | 5 d | 8 d | 6 mm | NG drainage, NJ feeding, antibiotics, PPI | 28 d | 48 d | Unremarkable |
Abbreviations: CV, central venous catheter; NG, nasogastric; NJ, nasojejunal; PPI, proton-pump inhibitor; TEF, tracheoesophageal fistula; Unk, unknown.
Fig. 3Flowchart for the conservative management of TEF after LBB ingestion. Ao: aorta; LBB, lithium button battery; w, week.