Endoscopy 2014; 46(S 01): E182-E183
DOI: 10.1055/s-0034-1365109
Cases and Techniques Library (CTL)
© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York

Treatment of unusual rectal foreign body using a Foley catheter

Authors

  • Abdurrahim Sayılır

    1   Department of Gastroenterology, Prof. Dr. A. İlhan Özdemir Giresun State Hospital, Giresun, Turkey
  • Ibrahim Nadir Düzgün

    2   Department of General Surgery, Prof. Dr. A. İlhan Özdemir Giresun State Hospital, Giresun, Turkey
  • Bülent Güvendi

    2   Department of General Surgery, Prof. Dr. A. İlhan Özdemir Giresun State Hospital, Giresun, Turkey
Further Information

Corresponding author

Abdurrahim Sayılır, MD
Department of Gastroenterology
Prof. Dr. A. Ilhan Ozdemir Giresun State Hospital
Teyyaredüzü Mah. Atatürk Bulvarı No: 323
Giresun
Turkey   
Fax: +90-454-2155146   

Publication History

Publication Date:
22 April 2014 (online)

 

A 70-year-old man presented to our emergency department with a history of abdominal pain and bloating and lack of defecation for 3 days. A round, hard foreign body with a smooth surface was palpated on digital rectal examination. The man admitted having introduced a mandarin into the rectum 4 days previously. An attempt at manual extraction of the foreign body was unsuccessful. Endoscopic examination of the rectum showed that a round, orange-colored mandarin was almost completely obstructing the lumen, and did not allow the colonoscope (Pentax EC-380LKp, Tokyo, Japan) to pass to proximally beyond it ([Fig. 1]). Grasping the mandarin with a 50-mm polypectomy snare (Endo-Technik, Solingen, Germany) failed because of the mandarin’s round and smooth surface. A 14-French Foley catheter (PlusMed; Sisco Latex PVT, Chennai, India) was inserted and passed proximally to the mandarin under colonoscopic observation ([Fig. 2]). The balloon of the catheter was inflated with 20 mL water and pulled gently. In this way the mandarin was fully extracted without complication ([Fig. 3]). After the extraction, control endoscopic examination revealed only mild superficial laceration of the rectal mucosa. The patient was observed for a few hours after the procedure and discharged from the hospital on the same day.

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Fig. 1 Endoscopic view of the mandarin in the rectum.
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Fig. 2 The Foley catheter was inserted past the mandarin under endoscopic guidance.
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Fig. 3 Extracted mandarin and Foley catheter next to a 20-mL syringe.

Most rectal foreign bodies have been inserted for sexual stimulation and are generally blunt, round, and have a smooth surface. Repetitive insertion of gradually larger objects makes these objects more difficult to remove [1]. Grasping round, large, smooth-surfaced objects is difficult with standard endoscopic devices [2] [3]. In such cases, using a Foley catheter in the treatment of rectal foreign bodies may allow a major surgical procedure to be avoided [4].

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Competing interests: None


Corresponding author

Abdurrahim Sayılır, MD
Department of Gastroenterology
Prof. Dr. A. Ilhan Ozdemir Giresun State Hospital
Teyyaredüzü Mah. Atatürk Bulvarı No: 323
Giresun
Turkey   
Fax: +90-454-2155146   


Zoom
Fig. 1 Endoscopic view of the mandarin in the rectum.
Zoom
Fig. 2 The Foley catheter was inserted past the mandarin under endoscopic guidance.
Zoom
Fig. 3 Extracted mandarin and Foley catheter next to a 20-mL syringe.