Title
Case report of recurring pneumonia due to unusual foreign body aspiration in the airway
Other title
Reporte de caso de neumonía recurrente por aspiración de cuerpo extraño insólito en vía aérea
Date Issued
25 March 2021
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Cornejo-Portella J.L.
Ruiz-Caballero D.C.
Rojas-Vergara D.L.
Publisher(s)
Medwave Estudios Ltda
Abstract
Foreign body aspiration is a rare but life-threatening event. Most accidental aspiration events occur in children. In adults, it can represent up to 25% of cases. Bronchoscopy remains the gold standard for diagnosing and treating foreign body aspiration from the lower respiratory tract. A 63-year-old female smoker with a history of chronic alcoholism and exposure to pyrotechnic smoke presented a productive cough, with whitish expectoration, dyspnea and pleuritic chest pain on the right side. On chest X-ray, she presented opacity in 2/3 of the right hemithorax. Computed axial tomography revealed consolidation with an air bronchogram on the right hemithorax, cylindrical bronchiectasis, ground glass pattern and centrilobular nodules. Bronchoscopic examination revealed a foreign body covered with granulation tissue in the right segmental bronchus (B6). The granulation tissue was integrated into the foreign body. In a second attempt, the foreign body could be removed, which was of bone consistency, seemingly a bird bone, confirmed by pathological anatomy results. After further questioning, the patient reported that two years before, she had choked when eating chicken. She had a cough and an episode of hemoptysis, but she chose not to ask for medical advice.
Start page
e8136
Volume
21
Issue
2
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Sistema respiratorio
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85104163266
PubMed ID
Source
Medwave
ISSN of the container
07176384
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus