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ARTICLE |

Attractive Method for Battery Removal FREE

Gregory L. Landry, MD; M. Bruce Edmonson, MD
JAMA. 1986;256(24):3351-3351. doi:10.1001/jama.1986.03380240041024
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To the Editor.—  We appreciated the article by Kavanagh and Litovitz1 entitled "Miniature Battery Foreign Bodies in Auditory and Nasal Cavities." We would like to add the use of a magnet to the list of possible battery retrieval methods. Use of a magnet to remove batteries from the stomach has been described,2 but, to our knowledge, a magnet has not been used for removal of batteries from other orifices. A magnetized screwdriver worked very well in the following case.

Report of a Case.—  A 9-year-old girl awoke with acute otalgia in the left ear immediately after her 5-year-old play-mate inserted a miniature toy watch battery in her ear canal. Her intense pain continued and she was examined in our clinic about 90 minutes after the incident. The battery was lodged mid-way in the canal and efforts to retrieve the battery with alligator forceps were unsuccessful and painful. After

REFERENCES

Kavanagh KT, Litovitz T:  Miniature battery foreign bodies in auditory and nasal cavities . JAMA 1986;;255:1470-1472.
Yasuo I, Noriyuki I, Satoru S:  Magnetic removal of alkaline batteries from the stomach . J Pediatr Surg 1985;;20:250-251.

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Kavanagh KT, Litovitz T:  Miniature battery foreign bodies in auditory and nasal cavities . JAMA 1986;;255:1470-1472.
Yasuo I, Noriyuki I, Satoru S:  Magnetic removal of alkaline batteries from the stomach . J Pediatr Surg 1985;;20:250-251.
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