| Literature DB >> 34548505 |
Yu Kun Huang1, Shao Xian Hong1, I Hsin Tai2,3, Kai Sheng Hsieh4.
Abstract
Magnetic foreign body misingestion (MFBM) is now occurring more frequently. It may cause remarkable mortality and morbidity in children. A retrospective analysis of the clinical data of children admitted to Xiamen Children's Hospital between March 2017 and July 2020 due to accidental MFBM. A total of 14 children who had MFBM were collected, the proportion between urban and rural areas was 8:6, and the ratio of male to female was 6:1. The age ranged from 1.2 to 8.9 years (median 4.6 years). The number of magnetic foreign bodies ingested by mistake is 1 to 17 (average 6.5). Magnetic foreign objects are divided into magnets (3 cases) + magnetic beads (11 cases). About 40% (5/14) of this patient series showed no available misingestion history. Management includes: 4 cases of open surgery (including 1 case of laparoscopic transfer to operation), 3 cases of laparoscopic surgery, 2 cases of gastroscopy, 5 cases of conservative treatment of foreign bodies discharged through the anus. Of the 7 surgical cases, 6 cases presented with intestinal obstruction and intestinal perforation (at least 1 intestinal perforation and at most 5). Abdominal sonography has limitations in the detection of magnetic foreign bodies in the digestive tract. The proportion of laparoscopic surgery in the 7 surgical cases is nearly half. All surgical cases recovered smoothly after treatment. Our experience shows that MFBM is a big issue for the small children! The early symptoms of MFBM are often atypical especially among young children and MFBM may lead to severe adverse events. We proposed a management strategy for MFBM in children. We advise pediatricians/emergency physicians, parents/children's guardians and society should raise the collaborated alertness of MFBM. Global awareness of risk prevention of magnetic material accidental ingestion cannot be overemphasized.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34548505 PMCID: PMC8455587 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-96595-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Clinical characteristics of 5 children with unwitnessed/non-self-reported magnetic foreign body misingestion in children.
| No | Age, year | Gender | Interval between time of misingestion to clinical visit | Number of FB/initial recognition site | Symptom(s) | Complication | Treatment | Hospital stay, days |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 8.9 | F | > l day (unwitnessed, patient had visited other hospital with negative abdomen sonography 1 day before admission) | 2 Mags/XMCH | Abdominal pain, vomiting | Obstruction, 4 perforation sites | Lap-tomy | 10 |
| 4 | 3.9 | M | > 2 days (unwitnessed, had visited 2 other hospitals and KUB at 2nd hospital revealed magnets) | 14 MagBs/OH | Abdominal pain, vomiting, fever | Obstruction, 2 perforation sites | Lap-tomy | 10 |
| 6 | 5 | M | > 14 h (unwitnessed) | 17 MagBs/XMCH | Abdominal pain, vomiting | Obstruction, 1 perforation sites | Lap-sco | 10 |
| 7 | 1.2 | M | > 2 days (unwitnessed) | 7 Magils/XMCH | Vomiting, bloating, fever, crying | Obstruction, 5 perforation sites Sepsis | Lap-sco | 22 |
| 8 | 1.4 | F | > 6 days (unwitnessed, patient had visited 2 hospitals in 6 days and KUB was not done until 6th day of onset of symptoms) | 3 MagRs /OH | Abdominal pain, vomiting | Obstruction, 2 perforation sites | Lap-sco | 13 |
FB foreign bodies, Mag magnet, MagB magnet bead, XMCH Xiamen Children’s Hospital, OH another hospital, Lap-tomy laparotomy, Lap-sco laparoscopy.
Clinical characteristics of 9 children with witnessed/self-reported magnetic foreign body misingestion.
| No | Age, year | Gender | Interval between time of misingestion to clinical visit | Number of FB/initial recognition site | Symptom(s) | Complication | Treatment | Hospital stay, days |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 | 8.5 | M | 5 h (witnessed, visited other hospital with only supportive care without KUB) | 2 Mags/XMCH | Abdominal pain, vomiting | Obstruction, 1 perforation sites | Lap-tomy | 12 |
| 3 | 3.3 | M | 2 h (witnessed and sent to XMCH directly) | 2 Mags/XMCH | No | No | PES-rc | 3 |
| 5 | 5 | M | 5 h (witnessed) | 12 MagBs/XMCH | Abdominal pain | No | Lap-tomy | 9 |
| 9 | 4.5 | M | 6 h (witnessed, patient visited other hospital and KUB confirmed diagnosis) | 4 MagBs/OH | No | No | Supportive care | 2 |
| 10 | 6.4 | M | 2 hours (witnessed) | 8 MagBs/XMCH | No | No | Supportive care | 2 |
| 11 | 2.8 | M | 8 (witnessed, patient visited other hospital and KUB confirmed diagnosis) | 7 MagBs/OH | Vomiting | No | PES-re | 4 |
| 12 | 5.2 | M | 2 h (witnessed, patient visited other hospital and KUB confirmed diagnosis) | 1 MagBs/OH | No | No | Supportive care | 2 |
| 13 | 3 | M | 6 h (witnessed, patient visited other hospital and KUB revealed magnets) | 11 MagBs/OH | No | No | Supportive care | 3 |
| 14 | 4.7 | M | 1 h (witnessed) | 3 MagBs/OH | Na | No | Supportive care | 2 |
PES-re panendoscopy retrieval.
Comparison of unwitnessed/non-self-reported magnetic foreign body misingestion (Group 1) and witnessed/self-reported magnetic foreign body misingestion (Group 2) in children.
| Group | Event witnessed/self-reported | Interval between misingestion and GI symptoms | Initial KUB at 1st medical visit site | GI symptoms | Gastroscopic retrieval | Discharged with stool | Operation | Hospital stay, days |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 (N = 5) | No | Unknown | 3/5 | 5/5 | 0/5 | 0/5 | 5/5 (3 Lap-sco, 2 Lap-tomy) | 10–22 days (median: 13 days) |
| 2 (N = 9) | Yes | 1–8 h | 3/9 | 4/9 | 2/9 | 5/9 | 2/9 (2 Lap-tomy) | 2–12 days (median: 3 days) |
Figure 1Abdominal X-rays of the 14 children with different number and different locations of the misingested magnets/magnetic beads (please refer to Tables 1, 2 in detail).