
@article{ref1,
title="[Difficult endoscopic extraction: pneumomediastinum and bilateral pneumothorax after attempted endoscopic extraction of needle incarcerated in hiatal hernia]",
journal="Giornale di Chirurgia",
year="2002",
author="Scamporrino, A. and Mongardini, M. and Stagnitti, F. and Corona, F. and Costantini, A. and Priore, F. M. and Tiberi, R. and Iannetti, A. and Occhigrossi, G.",
volume="23",
number="6-7",
pages="261-267",
abstract="From June 1987 to April 2000, 167 (74%) of 223 patients suspected of swallowing foreign bodies were treated. Hundred-sixty-three were successfully treated endoscopically. The surgery rate was 2.4%. There was failure to remove a tablespoon, a tooth-brush, a dental prostheses with metallic hook, a knitting-needle. The sharp and pointed foreign bodies were 35 (20.9%). Endoscopic removal of sharp and pointed foreign bodies in the upper gastrointestinal tract can be very difficult to manage. The Authors report iatrogenic perforation of esophagus-gastric-fundus in a patient with hiatus hernia who ingested a big knitting-needle in order to suicide. They think that it is absolutely necessary to use special endoscopic equipment during the taking out of foreign-body procedure, especially when pointed and sharp-edge shaped bodies are involved and when there is high risk of iatrogenic lesions.<p /><p>Language: it</p>",
language="it",
issn="0391-9005",
doi="",
url="http://dx.doi.org/"
}