His vital signs on admission were as follows: temperature 38 ºC; blood pressure 110/70 mmHg; heart rate 98 beats/min; and respiratory rate 22 breaths/min. Physical examination revealed localized wheeze and course crackles in the right lung base. He had finger clubbing. Examination of other systems was normal. Hematological investigations showed normal white blood cell count and chemical analysis.
A chest radiograph and computed tomography scan revealed a nail in the peripheral region of the right lower lobe (Fig. 1).
Rigid bronchoscopy under general anesthesia was performed. The right main stem bronchus was infiltrated by a tumorous structure and a foreign body was detected in the right lower lobe. The nail could not be extracted with forceps during rigid bronchoscopy because of diffuse hemorrhage, so a mini thoracotomy was performed, during which tight adhesions of the diaphragmatic pleura and right lower lobe collapse were noted. The nail was removed by wedge resection and pathologic examination revealed small cell lung cancer. On the seventh postoperative day, the patient was referred for chemotherapy.
Fig 1: Chest X-ray showing a foreign body.
Foreign body aspiration in adults with a normal swallowing reflex is rare. Risk factors leading to aspiration are neurologic dysfunction, trauma with loss of consciousness, facial trauma, intubation, dental procedures, underlying pulmonary disease, alcohol consumption, and sedative use.[1,3]
Normally, the swallowing reflex protects adults from foreign body aspiration into the airway.[7] When this mechanism is disrupted (by CNS dysfunction due to stroke, metabolic encephalopathy, alcoholism, sedatives, mental retardation, seizure) or when the foreign body bypasses this reflex in the oropharynx (by intubation, dental procedure, facial trauma, gastroesophageal reflux) it would easily be aspirated.
Patients usually present with persistent respiratory symptoms and are examined for alternative diagnoses, unless there is a definite history of aspiration. Both adults and children present with similar symptoms, with the exception of delay in diagnosis common in adults.[2]
Early complications of foreign body aspiration include dyspnea, asphyxia, cardiac arrest, laryngeal edema, and pneumothorax.[7] Late complications include obstructive pneumonitis, atelectasis, lung abscess, empyema, bronchiectasis, bronchial stricture, hemoptysis, development of inflammatory polyps at the site of lodgment, and decreased perfusion of the lung on the side of foreign body aspiration.[1,3]
Occult foreign body aspiration in adults may remain undetected for years and lead to erroneous clinical diagnoses such as bronchitis, asthma, chronic pneumonia, bronchiectasis, or even a tumor.[1,3,8] Bronchoscopy should always be attempted in adults with foreign body aspiration to inspect thoroughly the entire bronchial tree. In this way, misdiagnoses can be avoided.[8]
Although coexistence of lung cancer and foreign body aspiration has been reported before,[1,7] the presence of small cell lung cancer accompanied by foreign body aspiration is very rare in the English-language literature.
1) Chen CH, Lai CL, Tsai TT, Lee YC, Perng RP. Foreign body aspiration into the lower airway in Chinese adults. Chest 1997;112:129-33.
2) Baharloo F, Veyckemans F, Francis C, Biettlot MP, Rodenstein DO. Tracheobronchial foreign bodies: presentation and management in children and adults. Chest 1999;115:1357-62.
3) Limper AH, Prakash UB. Tracheobronchial foreign bodies in adults. Ann Intern Med 1990;112:604-9.
4) Case records of the Massachusetts General Hospital. Weekly clinicopathological exercises. Case 33-1997. A 75-year-old man with chest pain, hemoptysis, and a pulmonary lesion. N Engl J Med 1997;337:1220-6.
5) al-Majed SA, Ashour M, al-Mobeireek AF, al-Hajjaj MS, Alzeer AH, al-Kattan K. Overlooked inhaled foreign bodies: late sequelae and the likelihood of recovery. Respir Med 1997;91:293-6.
6) Gürsu S, Sırmalı M, Gezer S, Fındık G, Türüt H, Aydın E ve ark. Yetişkinlerde trakeobronşiyal yabancı cisim aspirasyonları. Türk Göğüs Kalp Damar Cer Derg 2006;14:38-41.