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Journal of Accident & Emergency Medicine logoLink to Journal of Accident & Emergency Medicine
. 1998 Sep;15(5):332–333. doi: 10.1136/emj.15.5.332

Life threatening airway obstruction: a hazard of concealed eating disorders.

T M Jones 1, L C Luke 1
PMCID: PMC1343177  PMID: 9785163

Abstract

The ingestion of unusual objects is not uncommon in florid mental illness. Less common is the accidental ingestion of a foreign body which has been used to induce vomiting. A case is reported of complete dysphagia that resulted from impaction of a plastic fork in the hypopharynx. The patient had been attempting to induce vomiting and, as a result of the presentation, was found to be suffering from a previously concealed eating disorder (bulimia). Self induced vomiting is one criterion for the diagnosis of bulimia and a review of the literature indicates that accidental ingestion of large foreign bodies is an increasingly familiar hazard of occult bulimia.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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