Orginal Research
2025 June
Volume : 13 Issue : 2


Foreign bodies of ear, nose and throat in paediatric age groups: A retrospective study

Srivastava A, Koul D

Pdf Page Numbers :- 150-156

Abhishek Srivastava1,* and Disha Koul2

 

1Department of ENT, Laxmi Chandravansi Medical College, Laxmi Chandravanshi Medical College and Hospital, Bisrampur, Palamu-822132, Jharkhand, India

2Department of Otorhinolaryngology, Swastik ENT Centre and Hospital, Nr Kathalmore, Ranchi, Jharkhand 834005, India

 

*Corresponding author: Dr. Abhishek Srivastava, Assistant Professor, Department of ENT, Laxmi Chandravansi Medical College, Laxmi Chandravanshi Medical College and Hospital, Bisrampur, Palamu-822132, Jharkhand, India. Email: swastikenthospital@gmail.com

 

Received 7 December 2024; Revised 3 March 2025; Accepted 12 March 2025; Published 20 March 2025

 

Citation: Srivastava A, Koul D. Foreign bodies of ear, nose and throat in paediatric age groups: A retrospective study. J Med Sci Res. 2025; 13(2):150-156. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.17727/JMSR.2024/13-26

 

Copyright: © 2025 Srivastava A et al. Published by KIMS Foundation and Research Center. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

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Abstract

Introduction: Patients in paediatric age group in a routine otorhinolaryngology outpatient department present with varied complaints of foreign body insertion. They can be sometimes simple to remove but at many instances produce tricky surgical challenges to safely remove the foreign body. The evaluation of the psychosocial behaviour of patients presenting with foreign bodies in the ear, nose, and throat aims to develop a protocol based on a scoring system for their removal.

Methods: Emergency department data from September 2021 to August 2024 was analysed retrospectively. A group of 217 patients below 15years of age who presented with foreign bodies of ear, nose and throat were included for study. Their biological data, psychosocial state, type and location of foreign body, presentation, associated complication and methodology for removal and postoperative management were obtained.

Results: The patients in early childhood (1-5 yrs) had maximum number of foreign bodies (131, 60.36%). The foreign bodies were mostly located in ears (57.14%), nose (19.35%), oropharynx (13.82%), oesophagus (8.75%) and bronchus (0.92%) sequentially according to numbers.

Conclusion: This study highlights the prevalence and distribution of foreign bodies in paediatric patients with their psychological state, particularly in early childhood. It also proposes a novel scoring system to aid in the effective planning and management of foreign body retrieval in emergency settings.

 

Keywords: foreign bodies; ear; nose; oesophagus; bronchus

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