A Randomized Clinical Trial of the Management of Esophageal Coins in Children
@article{Waltzman2005ARC,
title={A Randomized Clinical Trial of the Management of Esophageal Coins in Children},
author={Mark L. Waltzman and Marc N. Baskin and David Wypij and David P. Mooney and Dwight Jones and Gary R. Fleisher},
journal={Pediatrics},
year={2005},
volume={116},
pages={614 - 619}
}Context. Children frequently ingest coins. When lodged in the esophagus, the coin may cause complications and must either be removed or observed to pass spontaneously. Objectives. (1) To compare relatively immediate endoscopic removal to a period of observation followed by removal when necessary and (2) to evaluate the relationship between select clinical features and spontaneous passage. Design/Setting. Randomized, prospective study of children <21 years old who presented to an emergency…
143 Citations
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Current data support expectant management for a period of 12–24 h with the hope of spontaneous passage and avoidance of general anesthesia and surgical procedure for the symptomatic patient with an esophageal coin.
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Current data support expectant management for a period of 12-24 h with the hope of spontaneous passage and avoidance of general anesthesia and surgical procedure for the asymptomatic patient with an esophageal coin.
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The prospective comparison of immediate versus delayed endoscopic esophageal coin removal by Waltzman et al5 in this issue of Pediatrics provides important additional information toward answering the question can previously healthy children who are asymptomatic after coin ingestion be safely managed with home observation, or should they have radiographs to rule out retained esophages.
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Spontaneous passage in 27 out of 136 pediatric patients with radiographic evidence of a round radio-opaque foreign body initially located in the esophagus eventually passed into the stomach or intestines, accounting for 20% of the total number of cases.
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