Abstract

BackgroundExacerbations of asthma constitute the most common cause of pneumomediastinum and subcutaneous emphysema in children. Foreign body aspiration is a rare cause of pneumomediastinum and subcutaneous emphysema. Foreign body aspiration leading to the occurrence of pneumomediastinum in a child with asthma may go unnoticed and be wrongly attributed to asthma, which leads to delayed diagnosis as well as to life-threatening and long-term complications.Case presentationWe describe a case of a 6-year-old Moroccan boy with asthma who was admitted to our emergency department for acute dyspnea and persistent dry cough. The patient was initially treated as having acute asthma exacerbation. Owing to insufficient clinical and radiographic improvement with asthma treatment, a rigid bronchoscopy under general anesthesia was performed. A pumpkin seed was removed from the left main bronchus. Clinical and radiographic improvement was achieved after foreign body extraction.ConclusionsThis case emphasizes that the possibility of foreign body aspiration should always and carefully be considered by the emergency physician when faced with a child with asthma presenting with pneumomediastinum and subcutaneous emphysema as an important differential diagnosis even in the absence of a history of foreign body aspiration.

Highlights

  • Pneumomediastinum (PM) is defined as the presence of free air in the mediastinum

  • We describe a case of a child with asthma who presented with PM and Subcutaneous emphysema (SCE), which were treated initially as an exacerbation of asthma and later found to be induced by Foreign body (FB) aspiration

  • FB aspiration leading to the occurrence of a PM in a child with asthma may go unnoticed and be wrongly attributed to asthma, which leads to delayed diagnosis as well as life-threatening and long-term complications

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Summary

Conclusions

Even if asthma exacerbation represents the most common cause of PM and SCE, the possibility of FB aspiration should always and carefully be considered in children with asthma as an important differential diagnosis, even in the absence of a history of FB aspiration.

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