An 8(10)/(12) year old girl with infantile cerebral paresis (ICP), severe mental retardation and seizure disorder was admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) with clinical signs of aspiration and died ten days later. Final diagnosis was esophagobronchial fistula caused by a foreign body in the esophagus provoking aspiration pneumonia, mediastinitis and respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). The foreign body was found to be part of a plastic toy. The clinical relevance of aspiration in mentally retarded children and the peculiar nature of the foreign body impacted in the esophagus in this case are discussed. We conclude that in cases of aspiration pneumonia in mentally retarded children the presence of unusual foreign bodies should be suspected.
Nitinol stents were used in ten patients as palliative treatment for carcinoma of the esophagus and the cardia. Following insertion of the stent the severity of dysphagia decreased on average from 3.2 to 1.5 (on a scale from 0-4). Difficulties with stent opening and passage through the gut were found particularly in the region of metal sutures at esophago-jejunal anastomoses. One stent, which had been obstructed by mucosal folds, had to be removed and replaced. One stent which had been incorrectly placed was extended by introducing a second stent by a coaxial technique. During the period of observation, six patients died after an average of 4.6 months. The palliative effect of the stent lasted on average for eleven weeks. In two patients the tumour grew beyond the stent and in three there was tumour growth into the stent.
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