The Moldovan Medical Journal (Nov 2021)

Clinical and imaging interrelationships in the diagnosis of foreign body aspiration in children

  • Diana Rotaru-Cojocari,
  • Victor Rascov,
  • Rodica Selevestru,
  • Svetlana Sciuca

DOI
https://doi.org/10.52418/moldovan-med-j.64-5.21.09
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 64, no. 5
pp. 47 – 50

Abstract

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Background: Foreign body aspiration (FBA) is a typical occurrence in children. The clinical signs are influenced by various causes, and the differential diagnosis is important, especially when the suffocation crisis is not recognized. The aim of this study was to evaluate the clinical and imaging symptoms in children with FBA. Material and methods: A retrospective study is provided of 156 children who were hospitalized and examined (clinical and paraclinical tests) in the Pneumology Clinic between 2011 and 2020 after having a foreign body removed from their airways, using rigid tube bronchoscopy or fibrobronchoscopy. Results: The most affected age group was 1-3 years, which constituted 77.6% (95% CI 70.2% -83.8%). The most common symptoms were: cough – 98.7% (95% CI 95.4%-99.8%), dyspnoea – 94.2% (95% CI 89.3%-97.3%), wheezing – 61.5% (95% CI 53.4%-69.2%). Chest radiography was relevant for foreign body aspirations in 55.8% of cases (95% CI 47.6%-63.7%). The foreign body was extracted from the right bronchus in 32.1%, from the left bronchus in 21.8% of cases, from the lobar / segmental bronchi – 22.5%, and in 21.2% – multiple locations. The etiological structure of the endobronchial foreign body was dominated by the organic ones – 96.8%. Conclusions: Cough, dyspnoea, and wheezing are suggestive of this pediatric emergency. Chest radiography provides diagnostic information only for every second child.

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