A Multi-Observer Study Examining the Radiographic Visibility of Fishbone Foreign Bodies

The use of plain radiographs to localize a suspected fishbone foreign body is the subject of controversy. Accordingly radiographs of 14 species of fishbone, impacted in a soft tissue phantom, were assessed by a series of observers from the ENT department (consultant surgeons, senior registrars and h...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of the Royal Society of Medicine Vol. 89; no. 1; pp. 31 - 34
Main Authors Ell, S R, Sprigg, A, Parker, A J
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London Royal Society of Medicine 01.01.1996
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ISSN0141-0768
1758-1095
1758-1095
DOI10.1177/014107689608900109

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Summary:The use of plain radiographs to localize a suspected fishbone foreign body is the subject of controversy. Accordingly radiographs of 14 species of fishbone, impacted in a soft tissue phantom, were assessed by a series of observers from the ENT department (consultant surgeons, senior registrars and house officers). The agreement was assessed by graphical description of the data and tested by a Spearman's rank correlation test The overall results showed that, for the clinician, radiography is very useful to detect the bones of: cod, haddock, lemon sole, cole fish, grey mullet and plaice; useful for red snapper, monk fish, gurnard and salmon; and unhelpful in detecting bones from herring, pike, mackerel and trout The use of radiographs to locate these impacted fishbones can be rationalized in the light of these findings.
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ISSN:0141-0768
1758-1095
1758-1095
DOI:10.1177/014107689608900109