Pediatric foreign bodies and their management

Current Gastroenterology Reports - Tập 7 Số 3 - Trang 212-218 - 2005
Marsha Kay1, Robert Wyllie1
1Department of Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition, The Cleveland Clinic Foundation, Cleveland, USA

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Tài liệu tham khảo

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Webb WA: Management of foreign bodies of the upper gastrointestinal tract: Update. Gastrointest Endosc 1995, 41:39–51.

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Ren PL: A rare foreign body: a mouse entrapped in the adult esophagus. Endoscopy 2002, 34:847.

Kay M, Wyllie R: Techniques of foreign body removal in infants and children. Tech Gastrointest Endosc 2002, 4:188–195. Comprehensive review including description of the endoscopic techniques and equipment used for a variety of pediatric foreign body ingestions.

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Byard RW: Mechanisms of unexpected death in infants and young children following foreign body ingestion. J Forensic Sci 1996, 41:438–444. Interesting review outlining the tragic consequences of unrecognized foreign body ingestions.

Chaves DM, Ishioka S, Felix VN, et al.: Removal of a foreign body from the upper gastrointestinal tract with a flexible endoscope: a prospective study. Endoscopy 2004, 36:887–892.

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Sharieff GQ, Brousseau TJ, Bradshaw JA, Shad JA: Acute esophageal coin ingestions: Is immediate removal necessary? Pediatr Radiol 2003, 33:859–863.

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Aktay AN, Werlin SL: Penetration of the stomach by an accidentally ingested straight pin. J Pediatr Gastroenterol Nutr 2002, 34:81–82.

Gun F, Salman T, Abbasoglu L, Celik R, Celik A: Safety-pin ingestion in children: a cultural fact. Pediatr Surg Int 2003, 19:482–484.

Karaman A, Cavusoglu YH, Karaman I, et al.: Magill forceps technique for removal of safety pins in upper esophagus: a preliminary report. Int J Pediatr Otorhinolaryngol 2004, 68:1189–1191.

Karjoo M, Kader H: A novel technique for closing and removing an open safety pin from the stomach. Gastrointest Endosc 2003, 57:627–629. New technique to increase safety of endoscopic removal of safety pins.

Aoyagi K, Maeda K, Morita I, et al.: Endoscopic removal of a spoon from the stomach with a double-snare and balloon. Gastrointest Endosc 2003, 57:990–991.

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Lao J, Bostwick HE, et al.: Esophageal food impaction in children. Pediatr Emerg Care 2003, 19:402–407.

Fox VL, Nurko S, Furuta GT: Eosinophilic esophagitis: it’s not just kid’s stuff. Gastrointest Endosc 2002, 56:260–270.

Bulstrode N, Banks F, Shrotria S: The outcome of drug smuggling by ’body packers’: the British experience. Ann R Coll Surg 2002, 84:35–38. Very interesting and up-to-date review of a single center’s large experience with body packing in adult patients and management protocols.

Traub SJ, Kohn GL, Hoffman RS, Nelson LS: Pediatric ’body packing’. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med 2003, 157:174–177.