Mythbuster: Pediatric coin ingestion vs aspiration?

Posted by Michelle Lin, MD on

Is this coin in the esophagus or the trachea?
The classic teaching for the Boards exam is:

  • Esophageal coins appear in the coronal plane, as shown above.
  • Tracheal coins appear in the sagittal plane because of the cartilaginous tracheal rings.

Mythbuster: Pediatric Coin Ingestion vs Aspiration?

A case series of 8 pediatric patients were documented with coins positioned in a sagittal plane were actually in the esophagus! This data was collected over 15 years.

  • Age range 3-17 years old
  • Location of coin: 7/8 at level of aortic notch and 1/8 at distal esophagus

The classic teaching likely still holds true most of the time (sagittal coin = tracheal foreign body), but don’t rush to immediate judgment. Take a look at the lateral view, and see where the coin is located with respect to the trachea and airway. It may be more posterior, in which case, it’s in the esophagus.

Thanks to Dr. Matt Anderson (Resident at Univ. of Wisconsin EM program) for the tip!

Reference

Schlesinger AE, Crowe JE. Sagittal orientation of ingested coins in the esophagus in children. AJR Am J Roentgenol. 2011 Mar;196(3):670-2. Pubmed .

Author information

ALiEM Founder and CEO
Professor and Digital Innovation Lab Director
Department of Emergency Medicine
University of California, San Francisco

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