- Foreign body cannot be recovered in ED
- Removal under general anesthesia is required
Discharge Criteria
- Ensure that there is no airway compromise
- Return if bleeding, infection (nasal discharge)
- If a button battery was removed, monitor for delayed sequelae as outpatient:
- Ischemic mucosa
- Turbinate or septal damage
- Saddle-nose deformity
Issues for Referral
- Follow up with otolaryngologist if:
- Removal unsuccessful in ED
- Concern for nasal mucosa injury
FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
- Return to the ED immediately if:
- Coughing, wheezing, noisy, or difficult breathing
- Vomiting, gagging, choking, drooling, neck or throat pain, or inability to swallow
- Parents should be instructed to seek medical care for the following:
- Fever
- Headache or facial pain
- Persistent epistaxis
- Persistent drainage of nasal fluid
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
- Consider nasal foreign bodies in children 2–6 yr presenting with what appears to be sinusitis
- Parents are best suited to perform positive-pressure removal to avoid frightening the child
- Often successful, with little/no sedation
- Can make other techniques more likely to succeed, even if it fails
- Mix equal parts Lidocaine 4% with oxymetazoline to deliver simultaneously
ADDITIONAL READING
- Fundakowaski CE, Moon S, Torres L. The snare technique: A novel atraumatic method for the removal of difficult nasal foreign bodies.
J Emerg Med.
2013;44:104–106.
- Heim SW, Maughan KL. Foreign bodies in the ear, nose, and throat.
Am Fam Physician
. 2007;76:1185–1189.
- Kiger JR, Brenkert TE, Losek JD. Nasal foreign body removal in children.
Pediatr Emerg Care
. 2008;24:785–792.
- Purohit N, Ray S, Wilson T, et al. The ‘parent’s kiss’: An effective way to remove paediatric nasal foreign bodies.
Ann R Coll Surg Engl
. 2008;90:420–422.
- Soto F, Murphy A, Heaton H.Critical procedures in pediatric emergency medicine.
Emerg Med Clin North Am
. 2013;31:335–376.
CODES
ICD9
932 Foreign body in nose
ICD10
T17.1XXA Foreign body in nostril, initial encounter
FOREIGN BODY, RECTAL
Joanna W. Davidson
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
- Self-insertion (autoeroticism):
- Phallic substitutes inserted by patient or partner
- Usually men aged 20–40 yr, with male to female ratio 20:1
- Ingested objects lodged in rectum:
- Chicken bones
- Fish bones
- Toothpick
- Iatrogenic accidental:
- Thermometer
- Enema tips
- Foreign bodies (FBs) used to aid in removal of feces
- Assault:
- Knife or pipe forcibly inserted
- Incidence of perforation is very high.
- Concealment:
- Body packing, “mules” illegally transporting drugs
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
- Complaint of rectal FB
- Rectal fullness
- Rectal pain
- Perirectal abscess (with imbedded bones/toothpick)
- FB on rectal exam:
- High-lying FBs are located proximal to rectosigmoid junction and are not palpable on rectal exam.
- Low-lying FBs are usually located in rectal ampulla and are palpable on rectal exam.
- Some patients may not be forthcoming with history
- Can present with vague symptoms of abdominal pain or obstruction
- Can present as bowel perforation with full peritonitis
- Often late presentation hours or days after placement, following repeated failed attempts at removal
- Rectal Organ Injury Scale (proposed by American Association for the Surgery of Trauma):
- Grade I—Hematoma: Contusion or hematoma without devascularization:
- Most injuries due to rectal FB are Grade I
- Grade II—Laceration 50% circumference
- Grade III—Laceration >50% circumference
- Grade IV—Full-thickness laceration with extension into perineum
- Grade V—Devascularized segment
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
- Identify number, type, and duration of FBs and mechanism of insertion.
- Physical exam with emphasis on abdominal and rectal exam
- Classified as high-riding vs. low-riding based on relationship to rectosigmoid junction
- Biplane radiographic films to confirm number and size of FBs
- Serious injury more common with assault
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
- CBC:
- For bleeding or peritonitis
- Urinalysis:
- For urethral/bladder injuries
Imaging
- Plain radiograph:
- Consider doing kidneys, ureters, and bladder (KUB) radiograph prior to rectal exam to rule out objects harmful to examiner.
- Define and locate FB.
- Assess for complications of retained FB including bowel perforation and obstruction.
- May be used serially to follow descent of FB
- CT scan of abdomen/pelvis:
- To exclude perforation or abscess formation
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
- Pseudo-FB:
- Patients insist there is FB when radiograph, rectal exams, and proctoscopy results are normal.
- Perirectal abscess
- Hemorrhoid
TREATMENT
PRE HOSPITAL
Cautions:
- Patient has usually tried to remove FB and failed.
- Further attempts at extraction will not work and could cause perforation.
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
- Perforation with peritonitis and sepsis:
- 0.9% NS IV fluid 500 mL bolus
- Broad-spectrum antibiotics (anaerobic and gram-negative aerobes):
- Cefoxitin, cefotetan, ticarcillin–clavulanate, ampicillin–sulbactam, imipenem, meropenem, ertapenem,
or
- Metronidazole/clindamycin _+ aminoglycoside/3rd-generation cephalosporin/fluoroquinolone/aztreonam
- Urgent surgical consult
- Advanced trauma life support (ATLS) with evidence of other trauma
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
- Appropriate sedation and analgesia is important to overcome spasm, rectal edema.
- Avoid enemas or suppositories.
- Low-lying small rectal FBs that are not fragile or sharp are candidates for ED removal:
- Firmly hold bimanually or with forceps
- Remove with gentle but firm continuous traction to overcome anal sphincter.
- Colonic mucosa tightly adherent to distal end of FB creates vacuum and impedes withdrawal of object:
- Passage of Foley catheter beyond object with insufflation of air breaks vacuum and permits retrieval.
- Awake and cooperative patients can facilitate transanal extraction with valsalva.
- May use instruments to assist with extraction: Obstetrical forceps, tenaculum, ring forceps, vacuum extractor
- 60% of rectal FBs may be removed transanally in the ED under proper sedation.
- Following extraction, anorectum must be thoroughly evaluated to rule out occult injury.
- High-lying rectal FBs:
- Not immediately accessible through rectum
- Usually require surgical or GI consult
- Attempt may be made to position object into low-lying position with gentle abdominal pressure
- Avoid blind transanal removal
- Direct visualization with lubricated operating anoscope (after blockage of sphincter and pudendal nerve with local anesthesia)
- Admission and observation for spontaneous descent (with serial radiographs)
- Laparotomy may be necessary as last resort if other methods fail, or if patient has evidence of perforation.
- Consider surgical or GI consult for other complicated rectal FBs:
- Larger objects
- Objects that have remained >24 hr with resulting edema
- Objects with sharp edges
- Proctoscopy/sigmoidoscopy after extraction to examine colonic mucosa
- Body packers:
- Ruptured packets of concealed illicit drugs can cause systemic toxicity, bowel necrosis, and death.
- Sharp instruments should not be used for retrieval, and other instruments should be used with extreme caution.
MEDICATION