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Surgical Removal of a Tea Spoon from the Ascending Colon, Ten Years After Ingestion: a Case Report

Overview
Journal Cases J
Specialty General Medicine
Date 2009 Nov 18
PMID 19918469
Citations 4
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Abstract

Introduction: The presentation of ingested foreign bodies in the gastrointestinal system is common in the emergency setting. The majority responds to conservative management and passes spontaneously; however, giant foreign bodies pose a management difficulty. We report a peculiar case of a giant foreign body (spoon) that presented very late after ingestion and the management of this presentation.

Case Presentation: A 30-year-old British white male barrister presented with abdominal pain 10 years after he swallowed a spoon that never passed spontaneously. His workup revealed the spoon lodged in his ascending colon. Laparoscopic retrieval was not feasible so a laparotomy was done for retrieval. He did well and went home with no complications.

Conclusion: Symptomatic giant ingested foreign bodies represent a management challenge sometimes and usually necessitate surgical intervention when all conservative means fail. We review the literature on management of giant ingested foreign bodies.

Citing Articles

Swallowed Metallic Spoon Causing Doudeno-Jejunal Junction Perforation in a 13-Year-Old Child: Case Report.

Alemu S, Bayileyegn N, Berhane Arefayine M Int Med Case Rep J. 2021; 14:731-734.

PMID: 34675692 PMC: 8521338. DOI: 10.2147/IMCRJ.S331039.


Self-ingested intraduodenal foreign bodies--expectancy or surgical sanction?.

Petrea S, Brezean I J Med Life. 2014; 7(3):421-7.

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Self harm through foreign bodies ingestion - rare cause of digestive perforation.

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Self harm through foreign bodies ingestion - a rare cause of digestive perforation.

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