Medwave (Mar 2021)

Case report of recurring pneumonia due to unusual foreign body aspiration in the airway

  • Luis Alejandro Rodríguez Hidalgo,
  • Luis Alberto Concepción-Urteaga,
  • Julio Hilario-Vargas,
  • Jorge Luis Cornejo-Portella,
  • Diana Cecilia Ruiz-Caballero,
  • Deysi Leslie Rojas-Vergara

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5867/medwave.2021.02.8136
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 02
pp. e8136 – e8136

Abstract

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Foreign body aspiration is a rare but life-threatening event. Most accidental aspiration events occur in children. In adults, it can represent up to 25% of cases. Bronchoscopy remains the gold standard for diagnosing and treating foreign body aspiration from the lower respiratory tract. A 63-year-old female smoker with a history of chronic alcoholism and exposure to pyrotechnic smoke presented a productive cough, with whitish expectoration, dyspnea and pleuritic chest pain on the right side. On chest X-ray, she presented opacity in 2/3 of the right hemithorax. Computed axial tomography revealed consolidation with an air bronchogram on the right hemithorax, cylindrical bronchiectasis, ground glass pattern and centrilobular nodules. Bronchoscopic examination revealed a foreign body covered with granulation tissue in the right segmental bronchus (B6). The granulation tissue was integrated into the foreign body. In a second attempt, the foreign body could be removed, which was of bone consistency, seemingly a bird bone, confirmed by pathological anatomy results. After further questioning, the patient reported that two years before, she had choked when eating chicken. She had a cough and an episode of hemoptysis, but she chose not to ask for medical advice.

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