Tracheobronchial Foreign Bodies : Presentation and Management in Children and Adults
Tracheobronchial Foreign Bodies : Presentation and Management in Children and Adults
Tracheobronchial Foreign Bodies : Presentation and Management in Children and Adults
Study objectives: To compare the clinical and management aspects of tracheobronchial aspirated
foreign body (AFB) removal in children and adults; to assess the influence of the operators
experience on the outcome of the procedure.
Design: A retrospective review of a 20-year experience (from 1976 to 1996).
Setting: A 900-bed university hospital.
Patients: Eighty-four children up to 8 years old (the child group) and 28 adult patients (the adult
group).
Results: The peak incidence of foreign body aspiration occurred during the second year of life in the
child group and during the sixth decade in the adult group. The symptoms at presentation were
similar in both age groups, but the diagnosis was significantly delayed in the adults. The AFBs were
lodged preferentially in the right bronchial tree only in the adults; a central location was predominant
(but not at all exclusive) in the children. Atelectasis was more common in the adults, and air trapping
was more common in the children. The most frequent procedure was rigid bronchoscopy; when a
flexible bronchoscope was used, it was always in the adult patients. When the operator was less
experienced, a failed first attempt at bronchoscopy and the need for a second procedure were
significantly more frequent.
Conclusions: At presentation, the symptoms seen with AFBs do not differ according to the age of the
patient; however, the delay to diagnosis, the location of the AFBs, and the radiographic images differ
between child and adult populations. The removal of AFBs in patients of all ages can be performed
by the same operators. Because the outcome associated with these procedures improves when the
operator is experienced, the removal of AFBs should be performed in medical centers that are
capable of acquiring and maintaining the necessary expertise.
(CHEST 1999; 115:13571362)
Key words: aspiration; bronchoscopy; foreign bodies, removal
Abbreviation: AFB 5 aspirated foreign body
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Results
After excluding the patients who did not meet the
study criteria, a total of 112 patients and 121 procedures were retained for analysis. The great majority
of the patients had been referred to us from another
hospital for the removal of a suspected or diagnosed
foreign body in the respiratory tract. In two patients,
an unsuccessful first attempt to remove the foreign
body had been made at the referring hospital. Our
series included 84 patients # 8 years old and 28
patients $ 8 years old. The 121 procedures were
performed over a 20-year period by a total of nine
pneumologists, and the great majority of the interventions were done by two of these nine physicians.
Gender and Age
There were 68 male patients (60%) and 44 female
patients (40%). The gender distribution was the
same in both age groups. The patients ranged in age
from 2 months old to 90 years old (Fig 1), and the
child group represented 75% of the total study
Figure 1. The age distribution of patients with tracheobronchial AFBs. Left: the child group. Right:
the adult group. Note the different scale in the two graphs.
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Clinical Investigations
No. of Patients
% of Patients
Penetration syndrome*
Cough
Fever
Breathlessness
Wheezing
No symptoms
48
36
30
25
25
2
49
37
31
26
26
2
Types of AFBs
The nature of seven of the AFBs (6%) could not
be established. Seventy-two of the AFBs (91%)
found in the child group and 16 of the AFBs (59%)
found in the adult group were organic in nature.
More than half of the organic AFBs in the child
group were peanuts. A list of the various AFBs that
were found in both groups is shown in Table 2.
Unidentified
No. of AFBs
39
8
5
4
2
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
3
1
1
1
1
Adult Group
Food
Garden peas
Mushroom
Apple
Stewed apple
Peanut
Meat
Organic material
Tablet
No. of AFBs
5
4
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
Location of AFBs
The distribution of AFBs in the different parts of
the respiratory tract at the time of removal was as
follows: in the child group, 63 AFBs (74%) were
found in the proximal airways (larynx, trachea, and
right and left main bronchi); in the adult group, only
13 AFBs (43%) were lodged in the proximal airways.
This difference was significant by x2 test (p , 0.005).
Only seven AFBs were found in the upper lobe
bronchi, and these were all in the child group. In the
child group, 42 AFBs (52.5%) were located in the
right bronchial tree and 38 AFBs (47.5%) were in the
left bronchial tree (no significant difference). In the
adult group, 20 AFBs (69%) were located in the right
bronchial tree, and 9 AFBs (31%) were in the left
bronchial tree (significant by x2 test [p , 0.05]). In
four patients (3.6%), AFBs were found in both the
right and the left main bronchi.
Radiographic Findings
There were no chest radiographs available for 7
patients in the child group and for 10 patients in the
adult group. Of the available radiographs, the main
radiographic findings and their distribution in the
two age groups are shown in Table 3. Atelectasis was
significantly more common in adults, and air trapping was significantly more common in children
(significant difference between the groups by x2 test
[p , 0.005 for both radiograph findings]). One patient (1.3%) in the child group had a case of pneumomediastinum. No relationship was found between
the radiographic findings and the delay in diagnosis
or the nature of the AFB.
Fever was present in 77% of the patients with
radiographic signs of pneumonia and in 31% of
patients without radiographic signs of pneumonia,
respectively: 10 of 13 vs 22 of 70 patients (significant
difference by x2 test [p 5 0.016]).
Delay in Diagnosis
The delay in diagnosis ranged from 3 h to 11
months. The mean delay (6 SD) in the adult group
Table 3Radiographic Findings in Patients With
Foreign Body Aspiration*
Dental file
Tooth and amalgam
Pin
Drawing pin
Toy wheel
Chicken bone
Pen cap
Plastic
Swab
Unidentified
2
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
2
Atelectasis
Air trapping
Pneumonia
Visible foreign body
Normal radiograph
11 (14)
49 (64)
10 (13)
3 (4)
9 (12)
9 (50)
3 (17)
3 (17)
2 (11)
2 (11)
1359
lem is made more complex because rigid bronchoscopy in children is quite a different matter from
flexible bronchoscopy in adults; therefore, only referral centers can gain enough experience to ensure
proficiency in the management of foreign body
aspiration.
Over the years, most of our procedures were
performed using rigid bronchoscopes. This does not
mean that flexible bronchoscopes cannot be used for
the removal of foreign bodies. In fact, many of the
procedures that were excluded from this study that
removed nonaspirated foreign bodies (mainly from
adult patients) such as clots, plugs, and suture
threads were performed using flexible bronchoscopes under local anesthesia.
Three additional issues merit some comment.
After the removal of the AFB, some of the patients
were put on a regimen of antibiotics, bronchodilators, or corticosteroids and chest physiotherapy for
short periods (usually 48 h), depending on the
presence of purulent endobronchial secretions or an
inflammatory aspect of the airway mucosa. This
might have contributed to the absence of complications reported in this series. However, there were
too many missing data in this respect in the charts to
allow for a rigorous analysis. The second issue concerns the absence of predisposing factors in this
series. Because this was a retrospective analysis, we
cannot be entirely sure that there were no predisposing factors. The intake of alcohol, for example, is
not always accurately recorded when patients arrive
in respiratory distress. Indeed, alcohol could have
easily been missed. The third issue refers to the
team characteristic of AFB management, especially in the child group. A proficient coordination
among the pneumologist, the anesthesiologist, and
the instrumentation nurse is essential in making the
procedure safe, fast, and efficacious. Although no
hard data support this observation (to our knowledge), most of the procedures in our series that were
performed by the usual team of experienced physicians and nurses were believed to take less time
and involve less stress for the participants, thus
reinforcing our view that tracheobronchial AFB removal is best performed in specialized centers.
We conclude that foreign body aspiration, although more frequent in infants and small children,
can occur at any age and in the absence of any
predisposing factors. The old notion that AFBs are
lodged preferentially in the right bronchial tree is
true in adults but not in children. Air trapping on
chest radiograph was more common in the child
group, and atelectasis was more common in the adult
group. However, if the history is suggestive, a normal
chest radiograph does not rule out a diagnosis of
foreign body aspiration. The removal procedure is
CHEST / 115 / 5 / MAY, 1999
1361
5
6
References
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2 al-Majed SA, Ashour M, al-Mobeireek AF, et al. Overlooked
inhaled foreign bodies: late sequelae and the likelihood of
recovery. Respir Med 1997; 91:293296
3 Burton EM, Brick WG, Hall JD, et al. Tracheobronchial
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8
9
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Clinical Investigations