An image of a chicken
vertebra bone in a man's lung. The bone, highlighted with a red arrow,
is in the bronchus," the airway passage that branches off from the
trachea into the lung.
Credit: The New England Journal of Medicine ©2018
It really did go down the wrong pipe: A striking new image shows a
chicken bone lodged in an Australian man's lung. What's more, the bone
was stuck there for five days before it was discovered.
The 78-year-old man initially went to the emergency room right
after he choked while eating chicken, according to a new report of his
case. He told doctors that he felt like he had something stuck in his
throat; however, an X-ray of his neck and chest didn't show anything
suspicious.
So, doctors assumed that whatever had been stuck had been dislodged, and the man was sent home.
However, five days later, the man was back in the ER — he had
developed a fever and shortness of breath, and there was a high-pitched
wheezing sound when he inhaled, according to the report, published
yesterday (May 2) in The New England Journal of Medicine.
This time, doctors performed a CT scan, which showed a chicken vertebra bone in the right "mainstem bronchus," the
airway that branches off from the trachea into the lung. An area in the
man's right lung wasn't inflating properly, but this symptom was minor,
the report said.
But how did an inhaled chicken bone go undetected for five days?
When an adult accidentally inhales a foreign body, the diagnosis
can sometimes be delayed by weeks or months — or even years. A 2013
report from Canada described the case of a woman who went 22 years with a
bone fragment lodged in her bronchus. And last year, a 47-year-old man
in England learned that he had a tiny toy traffic cone lodged in his
airway, from an incident 40 years earlier.
A delayed diagnosis can happen because, if a foreign body is
relatively small and doesn't completely block the airway (which would
cause asphyxiation), it can pass into one of the lungs and cause
less-severe symptoms than it would if it completely blocked the airway,
according to a 2012 report of a case of foreign-body inhalation. What's
more, up to 80 percent of foreign bodies are not visible on chest X-rays
alone, according to the 2013 report.
Dr. Robert Glatter, an emergency-medicine physician at Lenox Hill
Hospital in New York City who was not involved in the man's case, said
it wouldn't be unreasonable to discharge a patient who came in for a
choking episode if the patient didn't have breathing or swallowing
problems and their initial X-rays didn't show a foreign body (as was the
case for the Australian man). In some cases, doctors may do a CT scan
in addition to the X-ray, if they suspect a foreign body in a person's
lungs. But "the problem is that so many patients [show these symptoms]
and they clear their airways [on their own], and they go on to do fine,"
Glatter told Live Science. Only a small proportion of people end up
having a delayed presentation of a foreign body in the lungs, although
it's still a problem that doctors worry about, he added.
A delayed diagnosis can lead to complications, including post
obstructive pneumonia, or inflammation that occurs around the foreign
body in the lungs, Glatter said.
In the Australian man's case, he received a bronchoscopy, a
procedure in which a long, flexible tube with a camera is inserted into
the lung, to remove the chicken bone. The patient "recovered well after
the procedure" and was discharged from the hospital three days later,
the report said.
Culled from Live Science.
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