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Grand Junction Times

Saturday, September 21, 2024

From Creepy to Bizarre: Doctors Find Strange Objects in Human Bodies

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Although unconfirmed, legend has it that the pediatric ear, nose and throat (ENT) specialty emerged because of the prevalence of tots sticking foreign bodies (FB) in those orifices. At least that’s what Sarah Gitomer, MD, was told more than once during her training in the field.

Now an ENT at Children’s Hospital Colorado and assistant professor in the Department of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Gitomer finds the rumor easy to believe.

“We probably average three extractions a week. It’s a big part of many ENTs’ jobs,” she said of removing items from patients not meant for the human body.

Gitomer’s first lesson in FB extraction happened in childhood, when she and her two little sisters were reeling from the trauma of putting the family cat “to sleep.” The next day, her youngest sister stuck a bead up her nose, and doctors said they needed to put her to sleep before attempting extraction.

“Noooo,” her sister cried, begging the doctors not to take her sibling away. “She’s a good sister. She didn’t mean to be bad!’”

Today, Gitomer doesn’t use the term “put to sleep” when consulting with families.

Below, Gitomer and some of her department colleagues in the University of Colorado School of Medicine share memorable extraction stories.

Something to sing about

When Gitomer was a resident on call being shadowed by a new intern, a patient from a nursing home was brought into the ER. Somehow, the old man had swallowed his partial dentures.

“They got stuck in his throat,” Gitomer said, adding that no one knows exactly how he managed the feat. “When we took a look with the camera, you could see the dentures right next to his vocal cords.”

Because she had an intern in tow, the pair were able to successfully remove the dentures without surgery. “It takes two hands just to hold the scope,” Gitomer said of the flexible laryngoscope she inserts through the nose to guide extraction.

Gitomer gave the intern the honors, who maneuvered the dentures up and out of the throat with Magill forceps, no damage done. “Yes,” Gitomer said. “He bragged about it for a long time.”

An unsettling surprise

Having your little boy fall from a window is never a good thing. But for the mother of one of Associate Professor Patricia Yoon’s, MD, patients, the accident might have been a lucky twist of fate.

Examining the little boy’s full-body X-rays in the ED, Yoon had a ghastly surprise – a nail, lodged in his bronchus (air passage from trachea to lungs) and pointing straight toward his heart.

When Yoon questioned the woman, she learned a house fire forced a recent move for the family. While hanging pictures on the walls of their new home, the mother recalled, the boy had been putting nails in his mouth.

“It was like one bad thing after another,” Yoon said. “But if he hadn't fallen, the outcome could have been a lot worse.”

A fishy tale (or head)

One of Associate Professor Samuel Gubbels’s, MD, patients should have consumed her fish-head soup, a Vietnamese delicacy, with a little less exuberance.

“She swallowed a whole head, and it got lodged in her esophagus (tube connecting throat to stomach),” Gubbels said. Worse, the head was upside down, its spikes stopping it in its tracks on its journey to the stomach. “So, the spiky end (acting like the barbs of a fishhook) prevented us from just pulling it out. If you pulled it back, it would have gotten more stuck,” Gubbels said.

“We had to use different instruments to morselize it and then get it to come into our rigid esophagus scope so we could pull it out of there. It was a little bit of a task.”

Original source can be found here.

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