Today, I received a call about a child swallowing a soft earbud. I advised him, "This too shall pass," but be sure to wash it well before using it again.
Aim: Children frequently ingest coins (generally with minimal reported side effects); however, ingesting other items has been subject to less academic study. Parental concern regarding ingestion applies across a range of materials. In this study, we aimed to determine typical transit times for another commonly swallowed object: a Lego figurine head.
Methods: Six pediatric healthcare professionals were recruited to swallow a Lego head. Previous gastrointestinal surgery, inability to ingest foreign objects, and aversion to searching through fecal matter were all exclusion criteria. Pre-ingestion bowel habit was standardized by the Stool Hardness and Transit (SHAT) score. Participants ingested a Lego head, and the time taken for the object to be found in the participant's stool was recorded. The primary outcome was the Found and Retrieved Time (FART) score.
Results: The FART score averaged 1.71 days. There was some evidence that females may be more accomplished at searching through their stools than males, but this could not be statistically validated.
Conclusions: A toy object quickly passes through adult subjects with no complications. This will reassure parents, and the authors advocate that no parent should be expected to search through their child's feces to prove object retrieval.
Tags
MeSH terms
Adult
Child
Child, Preschool
Deglutition
Feces*
Female
Foreign Bodies*
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
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