Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11452/22962
Title: Swallowed open safety pin and amulet in infants: Consequences of a tradition in Turkey
Authors: Uludağ Üniversitesi/Tıp Fakültesi/Çocuk Cerrahisi Anabilim Dalı.
Kiriştioğlu, İrfan
Kılıç, Nizamettin
Gürpınar, Arif Nuri
Doǧruyol, Hasan
21645753900
7005266570
7004350616
56624750400
Keywords: Surgery
Safety pin
Foreign body
Flexible gastroscopy
Children
Foreign-bodies
Management
Issue Date: Sep-1998
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Citation: Kiriştioğlu, İ. vd. (1998). "Swallowed open safety pin and amulet in infants: consequences of a tradition in Turkey". Minimally Invasive Therapy & Allied Technologies, 7(4), 415-417.
Abstract: ingestion of safety pins (SP) is relatively uncommon in infants. To attach an amulet with SP on the clothes of a baby is widely-accepted as a tradition in Turkey with the result that ingestion of open SP is more common here. 15 patients were admitted during a 3 year period after having swallowed an open safely pin; eight were males in the age range 7-12 months. Ail of the patients were asymptomatic. The sites of the foreign bodies were; ti-e oesophagus (four), stomach (four), duodenum (three), small bowel (three), and rectum (one). Extraction by means of flexible gastroscopy was successful in 10 patients (90.6 %) while one (9.4 %) required a laparotomy. The remaining four patients discharged the foreign body via the rectum without any complication. Endoscopic extraction of open safety pins with the flexible endoscope is usually successful in infants.
URI: https://doi.org/10.3109/13645709809152889
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.3109/13645709809152889
http://hdl.handle.net/11452/22962
ISSN: 1364-5706
Appears in Collections:Scopus
Web of Science

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