Aural and nasal foreign bodies in children – Epidemiology and correlation with hyperkinetic disorders, developmental disorders and congenital malformations.

Related Articles

Aural and nasal foreign bodies in children – Epidemiology and correlation with hyperkinetic disorders, developmental disorders and congenital malformations.

Int J Pediatr Otorhinolaryngol. 2019 Jan 07;118:165-169

Authors: Schuldt T, Großmann W, Weiss NM, Ovari A, Mlynski R, Schraven SP

Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Foreign body incorporation in children is often a serious situation. Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) could be a risk factor for self-insertion of foreign bodies. Large cohort analyses are missing.
METHODS: This was a retrospective analysis of patients’ records from a health insurance company representing 2.19% of the German population and 1.75% of German children and adolescents. According to the International Classification of Diseases, children in the age range between 1 and 18 years have been screened for foreign bodies in ear, nasal sinus and nostrils as well as for hyperkinetic disorders (F90), disorders of psychological development (F80-F89), and congenital malformations, deformations and chromosomal abnormalities (Q00-Q99).
RESULTS: In total, 12887 children (6609 male; 6278 female) have been treated in 16929 cases. The majority (n = 10041 (77.9%)) presented with foreign body incorporation on a single occasion. On average, 1.31 cases of foreign body treatment were recorded per child; 14.1% of children with foreign body treatment (FBT) also had a record of hyperkinetic disorder, 52.7% had a disorder of psychological development, and 50.8% a congenital malformation. Mean occurrence of FBT was 174.8 days before the diagnosis of a hyperkinetic disorder but 517.2 days after the diagnosis of a psychological development disorder and 683.1 days after the diagnosis of a congenital malformation, deformation or chromosomal abnormality.
CONCLUSION: Patients with disorders of psychological development as well as children with congenital malformations are high-risk patients for nasal and aural foreign bodies. The prevalence of a hyperkinetic disorder in patients with FBT is much higher than in the normal population. ADHD is a risk factor for foreign bodies.

PMID: 30639970 [PubMed – as supplied by publisher]

via https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30639970?dopt=Abstract