Atlas of foreign body ingestion, foreign body ingestion, atlat for Pediatric, atlas for medical, tuyenlab.net
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Fig 1. Coin in the proximal esophagus of a 2-year-old boy (AP view). It was causing a cough over the previous 4 days. It was impacted at the upper esophageal sphincter. |
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Fig 2. Button batteries are commonly swallowed by children
and present a high risk of severe complications and possible death.
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Fig 3. Rare earth magnets or Neodymium magnets are particularly dangerous when swallowed, especially if more than one is swallowed within a short period of time. |
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Fig 4. Lateral view of coin in proximal esophagus. |
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Fig 5. Endoscopic view of coin impacted in mid-esophagus. |
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Fig 6. Coin in lower esophagus (PA view). It was impacted at the lower esophageal sphincter. |
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Fig 7. Radiograph of a button battery showing the “double contour” or “halo.” |
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Fig 8. Radiograph showing two magnets in close proximity in the small bowel. It may not be possible to tell if they are attached across the bowel wall or within the bowel lumen. |
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Fig 9. Straight pin on abdominal radiograph (PA view). |
This is only a part of the book : Color Atlas of Pediatrics 1st Edition of authors: Richard P. Usatine, MD; Camille Sabella, MD; Mindy Ann Smith, MD; E.J. Mayeaux, Jr., MD; Heidi S. Chumley, MD and Elumalai Appachi, MD, MRCP (UK). If you want to view the full content of the book and support author. Please buy it here: https://goo.gl/BEp0yD
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