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You can find the current article at its original source at https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2017/sep/26/man-who-thought-he-had-lung-cancer-finds-lump-was-a-toy-traffic-cone
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'Cancer patient' finds lump was toy traffic cone inhaled in 1967 | |
(35 minutes later) | |
A toy traffic cone has been found in the lung of a man 40 years after he inhaled it. | |
It was originally thought that the unnamed 47-year-old man from Preston might have cancer. | |
He was referred to a respiratory clinic after complaining of coughing up yellow mucus and feeling unwell for over a year. | |
Medics initially thought the patient, who had also recently suffered pneumonia and had been a long-term smoker, had a tumour after an x-ray showed a mass in a lung. | |
However during a bronchoscopy, which was carried out to help aid diagnosis, they realised it was a “long-lost Playmobil traffic cone” the patient had received on his seventh birthday. | However during a bronchoscopy, which was carried out to help aid diagnosis, they realised it was a “long-lost Playmobil traffic cone” the patient had received on his seventh birthday. |
The miniature plastic cone, about 1cm in length, was removed with biopsy forceps. | |
Doctors writing in BMJ Case Reports said: “Following the procedure, the patient reported that he regularly played with and even swallowed pieces of Playmobil during his childhood. | |
“He recalled being given this Playmobil set for his seventh birthday and believes he aspirated the toy traffic cone soon after.” | |
While it is a common occurrence for children to accidentally inhale small objects, “a case in which the onset of symptoms occurs so long after initial aspiration is unheard of”. | While it is a common occurrence for children to accidentally inhale small objects, “a case in which the onset of symptoms occurs so long after initial aspiration is unheard of”. |
The doctors said that to their knowledge, it was the first reported case of a tracheobronchial foreign body that was overlooked for 40 years. | |
“This may be because aspiration occurred at such a young age that the patient’s airway was able to remodel and adapt to the presence of this foreign body,” the report said. | “This may be because aspiration occurred at such a young age that the patient’s airway was able to remodel and adapt to the presence of this foreign body,” the report said. |
They added that during childhood, the object may have been absorbed into the lining of the lung, which developed around it. | |
Four months after the removal of the tiny traffic cone, the patient’s cough had nearly cleared and his other symptoms had markedly improved. | |
The medics said: “On a positive note, his symptoms improved markedly and he finally found his long-lost Playmobil traffic cone in the very last place he would look.” |