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Published in: Irish Journal of Medical Science (1971 -) 4/2019

01-11-2019 | Epistaxis | Original Article

Nasal foreign bodies in the paediatric emergency department

Authors: Lisa Dann, Jaime Doody, Ruth Howard, Carol Blackburn, John Russell, Michael Barrett

Published in: Irish Journal of Medical Science (1971 -) | Issue 4/2019

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Abstract

Background

Nasal foreign body(-ies) (FB) cause local irritation, inflammation, and mucosal erosion and carry a potential risk of aspiration. The aim is to describe the management of nasal FBs in our Emergency Department (ED).

Method

A retrospective study of 100 sequential suspected nasal FB presentations to a tertiary paediatric ED. Patient age, gender, FB typology, doctor/nurse seniority, sedation/analgesia usage, removal method, ENT referral rate, extraction time and disposition were collected. Data was inputted to Microsoft Excel®.

Results

One hundred cases were encountered over 16 months: 51 males and 49 females. Median age was 3.4 years (range 0.8–10). Of the 73 FB visualised in the ED, 78% (57/73) were successfully removed by ED staff. Sixteen visualised in ED required ENT removal. Of those 16 FBs, 7 were removed at OPD while 9 were removed by ENT in ED.

Discussion

The ED physician/advanced nurse practitioner successfully managed most children with a nasal FB in the ED. The goal of the management should be to minimise complications/repeated attempts. Formation of a national guideline to assist in ED removal and timely care will hopefully improve patient’s experience. It will include guidance on topical anaesthetic use, performing radiographs for radiopaque objects not initially visualised and limiting ED staff extraction attempts.
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Metadata
Title
Nasal foreign bodies in the paediatric emergency department
Authors
Lisa Dann
Jaime Doody
Ruth Howard
Carol Blackburn
John Russell
Michael Barrett
Publication date
01-11-2019
Publisher
Springer London
Keyword
Epistaxis
Published in
Irish Journal of Medical Science (1971 -) / Issue 4/2019
Print ISSN: 0021-1265
Electronic ISSN: 1863-4362
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11845-019-02000-z

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