Nose

Nasal Foreign Body

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Nasal Foreign Body, Nose Foreign Body, Nostril Foreign Body

  • Epidemiology
  1. Common in young children and developmentally disabled
  • Etiology
  1. Inorganic Materials (Beads, Pebbles, Wax, Button batteries)
  2. Organic Materials (Beans, Peas)
    1. Tend to swell and soften
    2. Makes removal more difficult
  • Signs
  1. Unilateral foul smelling discharge
  2. Nasal obstruction
  3. Vasoconstriction makes foreign body more easily seen
  4. Nasal foreign bodies are typically located below the inferior turbinate
  • Precautions
  1. Do not push posteriorly
    1. May result in aspiration or more difficult further removal
  2. Button batteries and magnets require immediate removal
    1. Risk of Septal perforation, nasal adhesions, saddle deformity
  3. Evaluate for concurrent additional foreign bodies
    1. Bilateral ears
    2. Opposite nare
  • Management
  • Patient attempts to expell foreign body
  1. Blow nose with opposite nare occluded
  2. Trial of insufflation (Parent's Kiss)
    1. Occlude opposite nostril (e.g. with finger)
    2. Parent blows into mouth (or with Ambu Bag)
    3. Avoid using excessive pressure or volume
    4. Forces air through nostril with foreign body (glottis typically closes as a reflex)
    5. Effective in up to 60% of cases
  • Management
  • Clinician attempted removal in clinic or emergency department
  1. Pretreatment
    1. Phenylephrine 0.5% (Neo-Synephrine) or Oxymetazoline (Afrin)
      1. Avoid Oxymetazoline in young children (see One Pill Can Kill)
    2. Topical Anesthetic (e.g. Lidocaine via Intranasal Mucosal Atomization Device or MAD)
    3. Conscious Sedation may be required in young or developmentally delayed patients
      1. Exercise caution with sedation in Nasal Foreign Body (risk of posterior displacement)
      2. Consider deferring sedation and removal by otolaryngology in the operating room
  2. Visualization aids
    1. Headlamp
    2. Nasal speculum
  3. Child immobilization
    1. Swaddling of infants
    2. Restraint board for young children
    3. Children in parents lap
      1. Legs restrained under a parent's crossed legs
      2. One of parents arms restrains child's arms
      3. Othe parents arms restrains child's head in slight extension
  4. Airway protection
    1. Position the patient to reduce risk of posterior foreign body displacement
    2. Patient supine with head of bed at 30 degrees is most often used
  5. Procedures and Instruments
    1. See Ear Foreign Body for other techniques
    2. Katz Extractor
      1. http://www.inhealth.com/category_s/49.htm
    3. Fogarty or Foley Catheter (lubricated 5-6 french catheter)
      1. Insert behind foreign body, inflate balloon and then pull out with foreign body
      2. Avoid forcing the obstruction posteriorly
    4. Telescoping Magnet
      1. For removal of magnetic foreign bodies
    5. Forceps (Alligator or bayonet)
      1. May be used for soft, compressible objects
    6. Cerumen curette
  6. Special circumstances: Paired magnets
    1. Paired magnets in each nostril may attract one another across the septum
      1. Pressure on the septum between the magnets can result in tissue injury and perforation
    2. Techniques
      1. Cardiac Pacemaker magnets may be used at each nare to pull the magnets apart
      2. Flat or hooked instruments may be interposed between the magnet and the septum
  • Management
  • Referral
  1. Most foreign bodies may be safely deferred to ENT for removal in 1-2 days
    1. Batteries (esp. button batteries) and magnets should be removed emergently (local necrosis risk)
    2. Posterior foreign bodies may risk airway obstruction and may require more urgent removal
  2. Referral Indications
    1. Foreign body refractory to removal attempts (posterior or hidden)
    2. Chronic foreign body with significant localized reaction
    3. Young or developmentally delayed patients requiring Conscious Sedation
    4. Significant Trauma on attempted removal
    5. Sharp, penetrating or hooked foreign body
  • Complications
  1. Airway obstruction from foreign body migration posteriorly
  2. Epistaxis
  • References
  1. Claudius and Brown (2017) Crit Dec Emerg Med 31(12): 13-20
  2. Claudius, Behar and Stoner in Herbert (2015) EM:Rap 15(11):2-3
  3. Warrington (2024) Crit Dec Emerg Med 38(3): 20-1
  4. Chan (2004) J Emerg Med 26: 441-5 [PubMed]
  5. Heim (2007) Am Fam Physician 76: 1185-9 [PubMed]
  6. Kalan (2000) Postgrad Med J 76: 484-7 [PubMed]
  7. Wilson (2025) Am Fam Physician 112(1): 27-33 [PubMed]