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The choking hazard of grapes: a plea for awareness
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  • Published on:
    Authors Reply
    • Jamie Cooper, Paediatric Emergency Medicine Consultant Royal Aberdeen Children's Hospital

    Thank you for your letter and for sharing your very personal experience.
    We agree with you that by the time the child who is choking is attended to by advanced medical practitioners the situation is often dire and that the best hope of a good outcome rests with prompt and effective attempts to dislodge the offending object.
    However, knowing that partial airway obstruction may quickly become complete airway obstruction, that (as in the cases we describe) First Aid measures may fail, and that even if the obstruction is relieved the consequences may be significant; we would also advocate that emergency services were alerted as early as possible.
    The Advanced Paediatric Life Support (APLS)1 guidance in the UK gives the clear advice with regard to first aid measures to be employed in the choking child.
    • If the foreign body is easily visible then carefully try to remove it.
    • If the child is coughing effectively and is conscious then encourage them to cough and monitor closely.
    • If the child has an ineffective cough but is still conscious then proceed as follows:
    o An infant should be laid horizontally with head down, supported with airway open (on the rescuer’s forearm or lap) and five sharp back blows delivered between the shoulder blades. If this fails then the infant is turned supine, still head down, and five chest thrusts (sharp and slower compressions using the same landmarks as for CPR) commenced.
    The Heimlich m...

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    Conflict of Interest:
    None declared.
  • Published on:
    Response to: The choking hazard of grapes: a plea for awareness
    • Xicheng Deng, paediatric cardiothoracic surgeon Heart Centre, Hunan Children’s Hospital, Changsha, China

    I am a paediatric cardiothoracic surgeon who came across the article in a public account of Wechat (a popular Chinese social network app). With great interest, I tried to find and have read the full text of this paper. The reason why I am so interested in this topic is that I myself, as a father of two, experienced the same event happening to the younger sister of my children and so fortunately, I managed to have expelled the whole grape with Heimlich manoeuvre and saved her. It was an evening one year ago when my girl was 6 and a half months old. When I was having a shower in the bathroom at home, my wife suddenly screamed and cried to ask me out immediately. Her voice sounded so urgent that I could hardly have time to put on my underwear to rush out. The baby was then already drowsy, presenting with lip cyanosis and spit bubbles in the mouth. It would seem to be useless if I call medical emergency service. I had no time to think about but tried to perform Heimlich manoeuvre with hands pushing down and cephalad in her stomach, the first sets of pushes didn’t work. I rushed her to living room to check her response and did the second sets. Fortunately, the whole peel-off grape was expelled out of her mouth. Her face started to turn red and she fell asleep. The grape was peeled by my sister-in-law (as a babysitter). She intended to hold it to the baby to suck the juice. Unexpectedly, the grape was suddenly sucked deeply in by my girl! As of now, my girl is very healthy and a...

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    Conflict of Interest:
    None declared.