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Ingestion of disc-shaped battery, typically by young child
Increasingly of more injurious lithium cell type
Esophagus particularly susceptible to injury by lodged battery with potentially catastrophic consequences
Frontal radiograph: Margin shows double halo/ring en face
Lateral radiograph: Rim of step-off/beveled edge
Negative pole (narrower side): Site of anticipated most severe injury
North American Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology, & Nutrition imaging guidelines
Radiographic coverage from nasopharynx to anus
Lateral view at least at site of confirmed foreign body
After emergent removal of esophageal battery
CTA/MR if esophageal injury present to evaluate proximity/involvement of vascular structures
CTA safest & most efficient vessel assessment
Esophagram to exclude leak prior to advancing diet
Battery distal to esophagus: Management varies based on battery size & patient age
Caustic injury due to hydroxide radical production in tissues adjacent to negative pole
Unwitnessed ingestion more likely to present in delayed fashion with nonspecific symptoms: Vomiting, difficulty feeding, cough, chest or abdominal pain, drooling, stridor
↑ risk of major complications: Unwitnessed ingestion, size ≥ 20 mm (majority lithium; radiographs overestimate size), age < 5 years old, multiple batteries ingested
Unwitnessed ingestion accounts for 92% of associated fatalities & 56% of major outcome cases
Complications include tracheoesophageal fistula, esophageal perforation, esophageal stricture, vocal cord paralysis, aortoenteric fistula (high fatality rate)
Injury evolves weeks after battery removal
Ingestion of disc-shaped battery, typically by young child
Esophagus particularly susceptible to injury by lodged battery with potentially catastrophic consequences
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