| foreign bodies in bronchi |
Any materials that are aspirated into the lower airways, such as beans, nuts, seeds, or coins. These items, which usually lodge in the right bronchus because of its anatomical relation to the trachea, may cause pneumoni
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| foreign bodies in ear |
Objects that enter the ear accidentally or are inserted deliberately. These are usually insects, pebbles, beans or peas, cotton swabs, or coins. SYMPTOMS: Foreign objects cause pain, ringing, or
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| foreign bodies in larynx |
An inhaled or aspirated solid object, such as a piece of meat, hard candy, safety pin, or coin, in the larynx. It is of great concern because of the risk of airway obstruction. SYMPTOMS: Symp
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| foreign bodies in the esophagus |
Items trapped in the esophagus (typically fishbones, coins, or large unchewed pieces of food). Parenteral glucagon may help the material pass through the esophageal sphincter to the stomach, but endoscopic retriev
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| foreign bodies in the skin |
Objects that enter the skin accidentally or are inserted deliberately. The areas involved are cleaned carefully. Foreign material can be removed carefully piece by piece or by vigorous swabbing with gauze or a brush an
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