VizD Radiograph Challenge Week of 9/24/2007
A 5-year-old boy is brought to your ED by his parents who state that the boy boy either swallowed or inhaled a coin. The boy is stable and you get a radiograph.
What is the most likely location of the coin?
(click on image to enlarge)
Winner receives $5
To submit your answer please click on comments below.
For more information about the contest, click here.
VizD is a weekly contest of an interesting or pathognomonic image from emergency medicine. Its goal is to integrate learning into a fun and relaxed environment. All images are original and are posted with the consent of the patient. For more information please refer to the following link.
4 comments:
the coin (like most swallowed coins) is in the esophagus. The trachea's cartilaginous rings are open a bit in the back, thus coins lodged in the trachea are often sagittal.
the coin is in the esophagus...lucky kid!
A coin in the esophagus is usually oriented in the coronal plane. A coin in the trachea is usually oriented in the saggital plane because of the lie of the tracheal rings.
Can you clarify that please. Sagittal meaning on a lateral X ray they will appear as a full circle?
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