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Routine Chest X-ray Post Rigid Bronchoscopy for Foreign Body Extraction: is it Necessary?

A

Assiut University

Status

Not yet enrolling

Conditions

Foreign Body Aspiration

Treatments

Other: clinical examination
Radiation: chest x-ray

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06106503
chest xray post bronchoscopy

Details and patient eligibility

About

Airway foreign body is one of the common emergencies. Its clinical presentation is variable, ranging from a clinically asymptomatic state to dire state of respiratory failure needing urgent attention and intervention. The gold standard for management is rigid bronchoscopy (RB) under general anaesthesia. Complications that can occur during removal of foreign body include bleeding, pneumothorax and rupture of tracheobronchial tree. Complication rates are higher during foreign body removal in children. Performance of routine post bronchoscopy chest radiography (CXR) results in an extremely low diagnostic yield but nevertheless is the common clinical practice prevailing today. It has previously been suggested that routine post bronchoscopy CXR could be avoided in asymptomatic patients.

Full description

  • Pre-operative assessment:

    1. History taking including if there was a definite history of foreign body inhalation or not.
    2. Clinical examination including symptomatology (such as the presence or absence of choking, cyanosis, and difficulty in breathing) and Clinical signs, such as the presence or absence of air entry, crept, and rhonchi.
    3. Radiological signs, such as plain chest X-ray findings.
  • operation: all patients underwent rigid bronchoscopy under general anesthesia. We used bronchoscopes of the rigid type to perform bronchoscopy. We determined the size of the bronchoscope according to the child's age. After induction of intravenous anesthesia, we performed direct laryngoscopy and inserted the bronchoscope with the help of the laryngoscope in a rotating manner and used a 0-degree telescope to locate the foreign body. Once identified, we used optical forceps to hold and to remove the foreign body. After extraction of the foreign body, we repeated bronchoscopy to check for any remaining foreign bodies as well as to examine the tracheobronchial tree for any trauma.

  • Post-operative assessment:

All patients will be under observation for at least an hour after the procedure.

All patients will receive ATROVENT and PULMICORT after the procedure through a nebulizer.

All patients will be examined clinically and vital signs will be assessed be before discharge CXR will be done only if there are critical signs as cyanosis, absent or decreased air entery on one side or both or surgical emphysema Strict instructions, that if any symptoms such as cyanosis or difficulty of breathing occur, to go the nearest health care provider.

Enrollment

100 estimated patients

Sex

All

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • All patients with strong clinical suspicion of foreign body in airway with a history of choking, cyanosis, difficulty in breathing.
  • All patients with strong clinical suspicion of foreign body in airway with the presence of clinical signs, like decreased air entry, cyanosis, or crept. Patients of any age and sex who qualified for the inclusion criteria were included.

Exclusion criteria

  • Patients underwent esophagoscope.
  • Patients refused to be enrolled in research.
  • Patients suffering from evident complications during the procedure.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Screening

Allocation

Non-Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

100 participants in 2 patient groups

patients will not underwent chest x-ray
Other group
Treatment:
Other: clinical examination
patients underwent chest x-ray
Other group
Description:
patients underwent chest x-ray
Treatment:
Radiation: chest x-ray

Trial contacts and locations

0

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Central trial contact

Hussein Alkhayat, ass. professor; Mohamed boudy, resident

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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