We describe a patient who aspirated three syringe needles in his childhood, which were detected incidentally during a routine posteroanterior X-ray examination. Two of them were located in the lung, and the other in the thoracic wall.
Fig. 2: A chest CT scan showing subcutaneous location of the needle.
When a foreign body is inhaled into the distal bronchial system without causing an acute obstruction, it may remain silent for a while depending on its nature. Patients with inhaled small inorganic materials usually remain asymptomatic for a longer period of time unless total obstruction of a distal airway happens. Foreign body aspiration in adults may remain undetected for years, with a delay in diagnosis of up to 16 and even 25 years.[2,5] Delay in diagnosis is attributed to failure to obtain a detailed remote history for foreign body inhalation, absence of symptoms during aspiration, and absence of any predisposing conditions for inhalation.[6]
Foreign body aspiration is unusual in adults and is often overlooked as a cause of airway obstruction. Although the condition is often clinically silent, lifethreatening hemoptysis may develop. Diagnosis may be difficult because patients may forget previous episodes of aspiration. Radiologic manifestations are nonspecific and include chronic volume loss in the affected lobe, recurrent pneumonias, and bronchiectasis. Rarely, development of a chronic inflammatory reaction around the inhaled material may lead to intrabronchial mass formation. In such cases, a foreign body can be visualized on conventional chest radiographs or CT scans as a centrally located mass with lobar or segmental collapse that must be differentiated from bronchogenic carcinoma.[1]
In adults, the right bronchial system is more likely to be affected by the aspirated foreign bodies. However, this may not be the case in children because the left mainstem bronchus is closer in size to the right one, and it does not branch at the same acute angle as seen in adults.[4]
In our patient, the needles showed marked corrosion which is an evidence for a long duration of intrapulmonary location. There was no bulbous metallic end on the needles; they might have been broken to prevent reusing.
Aspiration of a needle-like inorganic material was previously reported.[7] However, we could find only a few reports of aspiration of a syringe needle,[8] but none remained at an intrapulmonary location for such a long duration. In our opinion, this is the first case of aspirated syringe needles that remained asymptomatic for such a long time until it was incidentally detected.
Acknowledgments. This study was supported in part by the Scientific Research Unit of Akdeniz University.
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