POTD: The Ingested Coin

This POTD is inspired by a common occurrence in the pediatric ED and a question that routinely shows up on board questions.

History: Mom and Dad are spring cleaning the apartment when 1 year old Freddy Boy starts having sporadic episodes of gagging or choking, and has vomited once. Parents report an episode where he looked like he was breathing faster and almost looked like he was struggling to catch his breath, which has since resolved. Mom and Dad panic and bring F.B. to your ED. Physical exam reveals a happy looking kid, vitals WNL, and a benign exam. Nothing in the back of the throat. Normal breath sounds BL. 

As their provider, high on your differential is foreign body ingestion, and you begin your workup.

Background: Children frequently swallow foreign bodies, with coins being the most common. Other objects, such as fish or chicken bones, buttons, marbles, and the dreaded button battery are common (for adults, food boluses are most common, followed by fish bones, coins, fruit pits, pins, and dentures). A patient who has ingested a FB raises the concern- where is the coin? Is it in the esophagus, or the trachea? Has it already been swallowed and now in the stomach? What was the FB? Oftentimes the history can be suspicious for FB ingestion but the point (or object) of ingestion is often not witnessed. 

Whether the coin/FB be in the esophagus or the airway can produce similar symptoms. Patients can be vomiting, have episodes of gagging and choking, stridor, complaining of chest pain, pain in the neck, throat, or upper back, drooling, and an inability to eat.

A lot of those symptoms are fighting words- they're usually how you describe a patient in danger of respiratory distress, and thus the patient with FB ingestion must be assessed with ABCs in mind on initial and repeat assessments.

Imaging:

The most important next step on evaluation for ingestion of moderate to high risk ingestion is to obtain imaging. Obtain a CXR AP and lateral; additionally, a babygram xray can include the chest and abdomen, which can pick up a coin that may have already passed through the esophageal sphincter and is likely on it's way out.

Back to our case. The child has an xray depicting:

https://prod-images-static.radiopaedia.org/images/219249/4b44984b51f84022153d6f2572b60f_jumbo.jpg

This is an example of the coin being in the esophagus. On AP imaging, coins in the esophagus show their face, while objects stuck in the trachea will usually be visible only by its edge. Obtaining a lateral view can often times help you visualize the trachea; a coin stuck in the trachea on lateral view will show you its face.

https://img.grepmed.com/uploads/5385/peds-trachea-coins-esophagus-chestxray-original.jpeg

In the esophagus, objects are most likely to get stuck at the cricopharyngeus muscle (about 75% of the time), at the level of the aortic arch, and the lower esophageal sphincter.

What to do depends on the object swallowed and where it is located. For esophageal FB, if the object is sharp, a single high powered magnet or several magnets, a disk battery stuck in the esophagus, if airway compromise is present or imminent due to mass effect on the trachea, evidence of perforation, unable to manage secretions, or if the point of ingestion is possible to be >24 hours, emergent/urgent endoscopy is needed.

For esophageal objects that don't have these characteristics, definitive intervention such as endoscopy can be delayed up tot 24 hours to allow a chance for the object to pass spontaneously. If past the lower esophageal junction, objects are very likely to pass through the GI tract on their own. If warranted, objects can be be monitored with serial xrays to follow the object on its way out. These benign objects can be expectantly managed, and the asymptomatic patient can be sent with follow up with PMD/GI.

For tracheal objects, such as this coin, in a patient without complete airway obstruction/on the verge of airway compromise, you can provide supplemental O2 if needed, have the parents calm the child if possible, and allow the patient to assume a position of comfort. These patients are likely to need bronchoscopy to remove, and it is important to get your ENT and possibly anesthesia friends involved in the case.

Best,

SD

Sources:

https://www.grepmed.com/images/5385/peds-trachea-coins-esophagus-chestxray

https://radiopaedia.org/cases/ingested-foreign-body-coin-in-oesophagus-3

https://learningradiology.com/archives2008/COW%20313-Coin%20in%20esophagus/coinesophcorrect.htm

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK430915/

https://www.uptodate.com/contents/foreign-bodies-of-the-esophagus-and-gastrointestinal-tract-in-children

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POTD: Retropharyngeal Abscess

Retropharyngeal Abscess


What is it?

  • Polymicrobial abscess in space between posterior pharyngeal wall and prevertebral fascia

  • Adults: Usually due to direct extension of local infection (ex. ludwig's angina, pharyngitis, dental abscess etc.)

  • Peds: Usually due to suppurative changes in local lymph nodes from an infection in the head or neck

  • Can also be caused from trauma- falling with pencil in mouth


Presentation:

  • Patients may prefer to lay down to prevent abscess from collapsing the airway. If your suspicion is high enough, don't sit these patients up!

  • Patients will complain most commonly of: sore throat, fever, torticollis, dysphagia

  • In late stages will develop airway involvement (looks for stritor, change in phonation, drooling, neck stiffness, tripoding, SOB)


Diagnosis:

  • CT Neck with IV contrast

  • On CT you will see loss of definition between the anatomic spaces in the neck, stranding in the subcutaneous tissues, tissue enhancement, and frank abscess formation, the location of the findings indicates whether it is a parapharyngeal or retropharyngeal space infection

  • You can get a soft tissue neck x-ray, but if your suspicion is still high and the x-rays are equivocal, you should still get a CT

  • MRI is useful for assessing the extent of soft tissue involvement and for delineating vascular complications

Management:

  • Get Anesthesia/ ENT involved early if there is any degree of upper airway obstruction!

  • These signs include: neck extension/head in sniffing position, stritor, change in phonation, drooling, neck stiffness, tripoding, SOB,  retractions

  • Coordinate with Anesthesia/ ENT to secure an airway (Tracheostomy in the OR or fiberoptic intubation should be considered)

  • If there is no airway compromise, consult ENT because many of these patients require I&D/ needle aspiration in the OR

  • Retropharyngeal abscess <2.5cm without airway compromise can potentially receive a trial of empiric IV abx for 24-48 hours without drainage  

  •  Antibiotics (Covering: GAS, Staph aureus, respiratory anaerobes, +/-MRSA)  options include: Ampicillin/Sulbactam 3g IV  or Clindamycin 600-900mg IV or Cefoxitin 2gm IV  

  • Admit

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Palliative Dyspnea

Managing dyspnea in the palliative patient.

This comes down to 4 approaches:

  • Oxygen

  • Opiates

  • Benzodiazepenes

  • Addressing the underlying issue

  • Other measures of comfort

Oxygen

  • Several options here with pro's and con's to all

  • Nasal Cannula 

    • Comfortable at low flows

    • Limited in how much oxygen it can deliver as it provides no reservoir of oxygen; it depends on the patient's upper airway as the reservoir of oxygen

    • at high flow rates is uncomfortable and causes dryness and bleeding unless delivered with a humidifier)

    • Many patients mouth breathe at the end of life

  • Non-rebreather

    • provides more oxygen, enables oxygen delivery to mouth breathers

    • Uncomfortably noisy, must be drawn tightly against the face to be most effective

    • muffles communication at a time when it is of key importance in the dying patient

    • Dries patient's mouth and nares out

  • Venturi Mask

    • An underutilized therapy

    • Addresses mouth breathing

    • Mixes oxygen with room air

    • Able to provide relatively high flow rates of oxygen 

    • Does not need to be humidified as high flow rates of oxygen are mixed with ambient room air

  • High-flow nasal cannula

    • Comfortably provides humidified oxygen at extremely high rates

    • Does not provide oxygen to mouth breathers

    • If the patient is being admitted it requires admission to the MICU (or potentially PAMCU)

  • Non invasive ventilation (Bipap)

    • Noisy, uncomfortable, frightening

    • Decreases the ability to commmunicate

Opioids

  • THE KEY TO PALLIATIVE DYSPNEA

  • Can be delivered via the subcutaneous route, another underutilized therapy

  • Administer zofran to offset possible associated nausea

  • Decrease the intensity of air hunger and dyspnea related anxiety

  • Have been shown to NOT SHORTEN LIFE IN PALLIATIVE PATIENTS, which is important to communicate to the dying patient's family. 

Benzodiazepenes

  • Anxiety leads to worsening dyspnea; managing the anxiety therefore aids in management of dyspnea

  • Generally not used as monotherapy, however can be used in addition with opiates in the anxious and dyspneic patient

Other measures

  • Position the patient as they wish, though generally the more upright patient is the more comfortable patient

  • Death rattle: As patients lose consciousness they lose their ability to swallow and oral secretions can pool, causing gurgling noises. There is no evidence that this is disturbing to patients, but families often have a very hard time with these noises.

    • Glycopyrrolate can help mitigate this disturbing noise

Cause specific techniques = address the underlying issue

  • Must weigh the benefits vs. the discomfort of performing these interventions

  • Pleural effusions: Thoracentesis

  • Anemia: Transfusion

  • Obstructing airway mass: Steroids, palliative radiation if available

  • Pneumonia: Antibiotics

  • Fluid overload: Diuresis

  • Bronchospasm: Bronchodilators

See:

https://first10em.com/palliative-resuscitation-dyspnea/

https://www.rtmagazine.com/products-treatment/monitoring-treatment/therapy-devices/oxygen-administration-best-choice/

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