Editorial Type:
Article Category: Case Report
 | 
Online Publication Date: 09 Sept 2024

Petroleum Jelly–Based Foreign Body in the Nasopharynx: A Case Report

DMD, MPH and
DDS
Page Range: 131 – 135
DOI: 10.2344/862982
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Nasotracheal intubation can reveal unexpected findings like a foreign body in the airway. In such instances, expeditious decision-making is crucial to achieve ideal outcomes. This case report describes a petroleum jelly–based foreign body discovered in the nasopharynx during nasotracheal intubation and the subsequent airway management. A 64-year-old man with no prior history of adverse anesthetic events presented to an oral surgery office for extraction of teeth and placement of implants. While video laryngoscopy for nasotracheal intubation was performed, a blue foreign body was discovered inside the tip of the nasal endotracheal tube. Subsequent attempts to locate the source of the foreign body revealed in the nasopharynx a strip of blue gelatinous foreign body which was removed with suction. Due to the persistent presence of foreign body residues in the nasopharynx, orotracheal intubation was performed. Nasopharyngeal foreign bodies may elude even the most thorough preoperative medical history review and airway assessment. Therefore, it is reasonable for practitioners to ask explicitly about any foreign bodies in the nasal passages. Practitioners should become familiar with cognitive aids for relevant airway emergency management techniques and equipment for expeditious decision-making when unexpected foreign bodies are found.

Copyright: © 2024 by the American Dental Society of Anesthesiology
Figure 1.
Figure 1.

Foreign Body in the Oropharynx

A still image from video laryngoscopy demonstrating the discovery of a blue petroleum jelly–based foreign body. The following parts are marked in the image: (a) epiglottis; (b) distal tip of the nasal endotracheal tube; (c) Yankauer suction tip; (d) uvula; (e) foreign body.


Figure 2.
Figure 2.

Suctioning of the Foreign Body

A still image from video laryngoscopy demonstrating the gelatinous nature of the blue foreign body, mimicking a heavy, viscous phlegm. Residual foreign body pieces are visualized on the posterior wall of the oropharynx behind the foreign body and nasal endotracheal tube.


Figure 3.
Figure 3.

Residual Foreign Body in the Endotracheal Tube (ETT)

A still image from video laryngoscopy demonstrating presence of a blue foreign body residue inside the distal tip of nasal ETT. The residue (*) is visualized behind the blue line of the nasal ETT in the lower right quadrant of the image.


Contributor Notes

Address correspondence to Dr Daniel Lim, Resident, Dental Anesthesiology Residency Program, Stony Brook Medicine, Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, Division of Dental Anesthesiology, 148B Rockland Hall, Stony Brook, NY 11794-8711; danielblimdmd@gmail.com.
Received: 16 Apr 2023
Accepted: 09 Jan 2024
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