| Literature DB >> 33842106 |
Daniah Al-Oufi1, Huwidah Mohammad Alkharboush1, Nadia Dawood Younis1, Ahmed Abu-Zaid2.
Abstract
The self-introduction of batteries into the vagina is exceedingly infrequent among preadolescents, with only six cases have been recorded in the English-language PubMed-indexed literature. Herein, we present the case of a five-year-old female child who presented with an 18-month history of recurrent ill-smelling vaginal discharge. Pelvic radiograph displayed a radio-opaque object, most likely representing a disk battery inside her vagina. Vaginoscopy showed a 1.2 cm disk battery that was removed from the right posterior vaginal fornix. Four weeks later, the child was doing well and symptom-free. Although rare, vaginal foreign bodies should be considered in the differential diagnosis in preadolescent girls presenting with chronic and recurrent vaginal discharge. Vaginoscopy is a useful tool diagnostically and therapeutically. A clinical summary of all PubMed-indexed cases of batteries as vaginal FBs in children is provided (n=6).Entities:
Keywords: foreign body; preadolescent child; vaginal fornix; vaginoscopy
Year: 2021 PMID: 33842106 PMCID: PMC8020610 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.13727
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Figure 1Pelvic radiograph showing a radio-opaque object (yellow arrow), most likely representing a disk battery foreign body at the lower part of the pelvic cavity (vagina).
Figure 2A 1.2 cm disk battery with granulation tissue and no bleeding was removed from the right posterior vaginal fornix during vaginoscopy.
A summary of all PubMed-indexed cases about batteries as vaginal foreign bodies.
| References | First author | Year | Age (year) | Symptoms | Duration | Imaging | Battery type | Battery-induced damage | Management | Follow-up |
| [ | Yanoh and Yonemura | 2005 | 12 | Fever of unknown origin and lower abdominal pain | 72 hours | Radiography, concomitant barium enema and vaginography | Cylindrical | Vaginal ulceration | Battery removal, necrotic debridement, systemic antibiotics, vaginal irrigation | 8 weeks, symptom-free and complete healing |
| [ | Huppert et al. | 2009 | 13 | Abdominal pain, vaginal discharge, and bleeding | 42 hours | Cystoscopy, vaginoscopy, sigmoidoscopy | Cylindrical | Necrotic vaginal burn | Battery removal, oral pain killer, topical estrogen, topical cortisone, systemic antibiotics | 3 years, symptom-free and complete healing |
| [ | Griffin et al. | 2015 | 8 | Vaginal bleeding, urinary retention, and dysuria | 12 hours | Sigmoidoscopy, radiography | Disk | Vaginal burn | Battery removal, oral pain killer, oral antiemetic, topical estrogen, topical antibiotics, systemic antibiotics | 7 days, symptom-free and complete healing |
| [ | Semaan et al. | 2015 | 5 | Vaginal discharge, pelvic pain | 48 hours | Vaginoscopy, cystoscopy, rectoscopy | Disk | Vaginal burn | Battery removal, topical estrogen, systemic antibiotics | 1 year, symptom-free, complete healing |
| [ | Khan et al. | 2016 | 2.5 | history of self-insertion of disk battery | 8 hours | Radiography, Vaginoscopy, proctoscopy | Disk | Vaginal burn | Battery removal, vaginal irrigation, topical antibiotic | 4 weeks, symptom-free and complete healing |
| [ | Nakib et al. | 2017 | 13 | Vaginal discharge | 6 years | Radiography, ultrasound, computed tomography, vaginoscopy | Disk | Vaginal stenosis | Battery removal, vaginal irrigation, systemic antibiotics | 1 day, symptom-free and complete healing |
| Present | Al-oufi et al. | 2021 | 5 | Vaginal discharge | 18 months | Radiography | Disk | Vaginal burn | Battery removal, vaginal irrigation, systemic antibiotics | 4 weeks, symptom-free and complete healing |