• Pediatric emergency care · Sep 2012

    Case Reports

    Complicated and dislodged airway foreign body in an intubated child: case report.

    • Katharina D Graw-Panzer, Stephen J Wadowski, and Haesoon Lee.
    • Children's Hospital at Downstate, SUNY Downstate College of Medicine, Division of Pediatric Pulmonology, Brooklyn, NY, USA. kgraw-panzer@downstate.edu
    • Pediatr Emerg Care. 2012 Sep 1; 28 (9): 915-7.

    ObjectiveWe report a case of missed foreign body aspiration in a child presenting with status epilepticus. On admission, the patient was found to have pneumonia, which progressed to respiratory failure and acute respiratory distress syndrome. While the patient was intubated and mechanically ventilated, the patient experienced acute respiratory deterioration. Subsequently, it was determined that a previously undetected foreign body had dislodged from the right main to the left main bronchus and was the underlying cause for the child's illness.ConclusionsA combination of sudden change of physical and radiographic findings with unilateral lung hyperinflation is highly suspicious for an obstructing airway foreign body. This case demonstrates that foreign body aspiration can lead to significant morbidity. It should be in the differential diagnosis for any acute pulmonary process in an otherwise well child because there is no specific clinical or radiographic finding to rule it out.

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