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Dr. CCHMC Pediatric Surgery

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Esophageal Foreign Bodies

Video Published 2022-03-23 Updated 2026-06-02

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Topic Overview

Expert discussion on managing pediatric esophageal emergencies including foreign body ingestions, button batteries, and caustic exposures. Covers diagnostic imaging pearls, immediate management protocols, and critical differences between acidic versus alkaline injuries in children under five.

Key Takeaways

  • Button batteries create electrical current and leak chemicals causing esophageal erosion; identify by halo sign on x-ray vs coins.
  • Give 10ml honey every 10min en route to hospital for suspected battery ingestion to minimize tissue damage before removal.
  • Alkaline caustic ingestions (pH 14, e.g. Drano) cause deeper liquefactive necrosis than acids; monitor for airway obstruction first 48hrs.
  • Symptomatic patients with negative x-ray still require endoscopy—radiolucent objects (fish bones, plastic, wood) are easily missed.
  • Do NOT induce vomiting, use neutralizing agents, dilute with milk/water, or place NG tube in caustic ingestion cases.

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