| Literature DB >> 33580816 |
Mattis Bertlich1,2, Friedrich Ihler3,4, Jan M Sommerlath Sohns5,6, Martin Canis3,4, Bernhard G Weiss3,4.
Abstract
There have been few reports of ingestion of bottlecaps worldwide. However, all of these seemed to be unlikely accidental ingestions with a comic side effect. In contrast to this, the authors of this study found an accumulation of bottlecap ingestions in a small university town. Hence, we conducted a study to investigate the nature of these ingestions. We conducted a retrospective cohort study in a tertiary referral center in a small German university town (Göttingen). All patients that were admitted for esophageal foreign bodies were screened for accidental ingestion of bottlecaps and included in the study at hand. Overall, there were 14 cases of bottlecap ingestion within 12 years. Patients were exclusively male, average age was 23.0 ± 4.2 years, ranging from 18.3 to 35.6 years. In 13 out of 14 cases, association to a fraternity was found. Young men, particularly those belonging to a fraternity, should be beware of bottlecap ingestion when consuming beer in risky rituals in small university towns. Alternatively, competitive beer drinking may generally be avoided.Entities:
Keywords: Alcohol abuse; Binge drinking; Esophageal foreign body; Esophageal impaction; Foreign body; Fraternity
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33580816 PMCID: PMC8843902 DOI: 10.1007/s00455-021-10263-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dysphagia ISSN: 0179-051X Impact factor: 3.438
Patient and treatment characteristics
| Data available [number (percent)] | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Age [years] | 23 ± 4.2 | 14 (100%) | |
| Sex [males] | 14 (100%) | 14 (100%) | |
| Nobility | 5 (35.8%) | 14 (100%) | |
| Fraternity Association | 13 (92.3%) | 14 (100%) | |
| Anamnesis for alcohol consumption | 9 (100%) | 9 (64.3%) | |
| Blood alcohol concentration [g/l] | 1.2 ± 0.8 | 7 (50.0%) | |
| Anamnesis for bottlecap ingestion | 12 (100%) | 12 (85.7%) | |
| Bottlecap localized radiologically | 14 (100%) | 14 (100%) | |
| Rigid endoscopy | 7 (50%) | 14 (100%) | |
| Flexible endoscopy | 7 (50%) | 14 (100%) | |
| Mucosal lesion | 10 (76.9%) | 13 (92.9%) | |
| Successful recovery of bottlecap | 14 (100%) | 14 (100%) | |
Fig. 1Upper esophageal narrowing. The upper esophageal narrowing lies at the level of near cervical vertebrae VI/VII, about 15 cm measured from the front row of teeth. A, B: Posterior–anterior X-ray (A) and left-sided lateral X-ray of the thorax (B). Bottlecap near thoracic vertebra I/II (arrow). C, D, E: Anterior–posterior (C) and left-sided lateral X-ray of the cervical spine (D). Posterior–anterior X-ray of the thorax (C). Bottlecap near cervical vertebra VII and thoracic vertebra I (arrow). R right; L Left; a anterior; p posterior
Fig. 2Middle esophageal narrowing. Point where the esophagus passes by the aorta and the left main bronchus. It lies at the level near of thoracic vertebrae IV. This is about 10 cm caudal to the upper narrowness. A, B: Posterior–anterior X-ray of the thorax (A) and left-sided lateral X-ray. Bottlecap near thoracic vertebra IV/V (arrow). C, D: Anterior–posterior (C) and left-sided lateral X-ray of the cervical spine (D). Bottlecap near thoracic vertebra II/III (arrow). R right; L Left; a anterior; p posterior
Fig. 3Lower esophageal narrowing. It lies at thoracic vertebrae near X/XI in the area of the esophageal hiatus shortly before the esophago-gastral transition. A: Posterior–anterior X-ray of the thorax (A). Bottlecap near thoracic vertebra VII (arrow). B: Posterior–anterior X-ray of the thorax (A). Bottlecap near thoracic vertebra VI/VII (arrow). R right; L Left; a anterior; p posterior
Worldwide case reports of bottlecap ingestion
| Authors | Journal | Year | Country | Subject sex and age |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rottmann SJ et al. | Ann Emerg Med | 1988 | USA | M/19 |
| Prakash K et al. | N Engl J Med | 1989 | USA | M/36 |
| Douglas RJ | BMJ | 2007 | Australia | M/24 |
| Debonnaire P et al. | Eur Heart J | 2013 | Belgium | M/38 |
| Rojek L et al. | Endoscopy | 2017 | Poland | M/22 |
| Werner CR et al. | Gastroenterology | 2017 | Germany | M/22 |