Posted on 07/25/2011 5:39:41 AM PDT by Red Badger
DEER ISLE, Maine Before May 17, Kacen Pedrucci was a normal 15-month-old boy. At his Deer Isle home, he was beginning to talk and was walking around happily, exploring his surroundings and putting things in his mouth as toddlers do. He always had a smile and a sweet disposition.
One of his favorite books was The Lion King, which was a talking book by pushing a button on the side of the page, jungle sounds could be heard.
But for the last three months, Kacen has been at deaths door, in and out of doctors offices, emergency rooms and hospitals, enduring four surgeries after he swallowed a lithium battery, likely from that favorite talking book.
There were so many days I just sat by his bedside, watching and wondering if he was going to live, his mother Kalashai Porter said Sunday.
Lots of children swallow foreign objects. Pennies, magnets, baby teeth, coins, marbles all have been known to make it through a childs digestive system. But the button battery Kacen swallowed became stuck in his esophagus and, once wet, began leaking, a dire situation that is becoming increasingly more common as lithium batteries particularly the button style have found their way into homes.
Lithium batteries tinier, stronger and more long-lasting than conventional alkaline batteries are found in hearing aids, toys, portable electronics such as calculators, computers and digital cameras. They are found in smoke alarms, clocks, musical greeting cards and remote car locks.
They are everywhere, Porter said.
Kacens family is sharing his story to warn parents of the potential dangers of ingesting lithium batteries and the need for immediate medical treatment. Parents and caretakers need to know how dangerous these batteries are, Kacens great-grandmother, Linda Maker of Lubec, said this weekend.
Maker and Porter said it took medical personnel at two hospitals several days to determine what was wrong with the toddler. Experts say misdiagnosis is common when dealing with toddlers and babies and an unwitnessed ingestion.
Kacen became increasingly ill earlier this year his fever eventually spiking at 105.3 degrees, screaming through an entire night and becoming so lethargic he couldnt raise his head and was originally diagnosed on May 17 at the Blue Hill Memorial Hospital emergency room with rotavirus, a common childhood ailment.
Two days later, when the child was not recovering, Porter brought her son to his regular pediatrician where he was given intravenous fluids. He was admitted to Maine Coast Memorial Hospital in Ellsworth and released the next morning.
All this time, we all believed he had a stomach flu, Maker said. But he just kept getting progressively worse.
At first I thought he was teething or had the flu, but it got bad so quickly, Porter said.
On May 20, Porter returned to Blue Hill Memorial Hospital where she and medical personnel noticed that the boy kept sticking his tongue out and trying to put his fingers down his throat. When Porter refused to leave the hospital until something was done to assist her son, Porter was advised to bring him to Maine Coast Memorial Hospital again.
Once there, as almost a last resort, a chest X-ray was ordered and doctors immediately spotted what was believed to be a coin lodged in Kacens esophagus, Porter said. He was immediately transported to Maine Medical Center in Portland where he underwent a two and a half hour surgery.
By the time the battery had been removed, Porter said, Kacen had dropped from 24½ pounds to 19 pounds.
The doctors said they had never seen anything like this, Porter said. Battery acid had burned through the esophagus and, even after it was removed, the chemical burning continued. Eventually, as Kacen began to heal, scar tissue began blocking the esophagus. Kacen was put on a feeding tube.
One of the experts that doctors at Maine Medical Center turned to was Dr. Toby Litovitz. She was absolutely amazing, Porter said.
According to a 2010 Journal of the American Academy of Pediatrics article, authored by Litovitz, serious and fatal button battery ingestions are occurring with increasing frequency as a result of the emergence of the 20-millimeter lithium coin cell the button battery as a popular household battery. Because no one witnesses the majority of these ingestions, Litovitz warned health professionals to consider batteries rather than coins when treating patients.
Button cell batteries are attractive to small children and often ingested. In the past 20 years, although there has not been an increase in the total number of button cell batteries ingested in a year, researchers have noted a 6.7-fold increase in the risk that an ingestion would result in a moderate or major complication. Complications can include vocal cord paralysis and death. She stated that the reasons for the increasing frequency of devastating complications are complex, including poor public and physician awareness and that many products using button batteries are not childproofed.
In fact, 61.8 percent of batteries that were ingested by young children were obtained from products, she wrote.
Doctors are also seeing an increase in ingestions by senior citizens who have mistaken their tiny hearing aid batteries for medication.
Severe tissue damage can be caused by the batteries within two hours of ingestion, Porter said. The doctors believe the battery had been in Kacens esophogus for one to two weeks.
He is so lucky to be alive, Porter added.
According to Dr. Litovitz, 13 children have died after ingesting lithium batteries between 1977 and 2009, with 69 percent of those in the last six years. All fatalities occurred in 11-month-old to 3-year-old children, and only one ingestion was witnessed. The diagnosis was missed by health care providers in seven of the 13 deaths because of nonspecific symptoms of vomiting, fever, lethargy, poor appetite, irritability, cough, wheezingor dehydration.
Meanwhile, Kacen is scheduled for another surgery Tuesday his fifth, to help dilate his esophogus. He remains on a feeding tube but is now allowed some soft foods during the day, Porter said. He is back up to 26 pounds.
Porter and Kacens father, Gary Pedrucci, however, will never be the same. It was the most terrifying experience, Porter said. We were so close to losing him.
Although the couple has insurance, the additional costs have mounted. They lost their rental apartment on Deer Isle. Their car is about to be repossessed. They have been living at Porters mothers home in Biddeford for months to be close to Kacen and the hospital.
We havent been home since this happened, Porter said.
A fund to offset expenses for the Porter-Pedrucci family has been established. Donations may be sent to Bar Harbor Bank and Trust, 68 Washington Street, Lubec 04652, payable to Linda Maker with Kacen Pedrucci Fund in the comment line.
PING for battery CAUTION!................
PING for battery CAUTION!................
Bundle o’ joy ping....
Let’s fix this one at the source: Stop buying electronic books/toys for your kids/grandkids/nieces/nephews, et al; and get back to buying them books that they can actually read with someone, or that someone has to read to them. If you never bring a coin battery into the house in the first place, the crumb-cruncher will never get the chance to swallow it.
Same with the cheap electronic toys that are everywhere. A good set of wooden blocks in a variety of useful shapes and sizes is preferable to anything electronic in my view.
Lincoln Logs instead of LinkedIn...
> Lets fix this one at the source: Stop buying electronic books/toys ...
Couldn’t agree with you more.
6 or 7 years back we received a Christmas card that played Jingle Bells using a button battery.
After Christmas my wife couldn’t bring herself to throw it away.
I wound up in a stack of old bills and papers.
A year after receiving the card, I was going through the stack of papers looking for a receipt (some product warranty problem). The battery and its electronics were found to have caught fire and then self extinguished for lack of oxygen (because it was in the stack of old bills).
These novelty items with the battery and playback recording are dangerous. If someone doesn’t get injured for ingesting them, they can also catch fire and burn your house down.
> Lets fix this one at the source: Stop buying electronic books/toys ...
Couldn’t agree with you more.
6 or 7 years back we received a Christmas card that played Jingle Bells using a button battery.
After Christmas my wife couldn’t bring herself to throw it away.
It wound up in a stack of old bills and papers.
A year after receiving the card, I was going through the stack of papers looking for a receipt (some product warranty problem). The battery and its electronics were found to have caught fire and then self extinguished for lack of oxygen (because it was in the stack of old bills).
These novelty items with the battery and playback recording are dangerous. If someone doesn’t get injured for ingesting them, they can also catch fire and burn your house down.
I like the way you think, BC! I’m not a dad yet, but when I am, I will be reading to my kid every night from an actual book. These electronic books don’t strike me as being anything more than that first “taste” of eLife.
I grew up with Lincoln Logs, Legos, and the Encyclopedia Brittanica. Computers didn’t exist in current form until I was a teen. It was tree climbing, bike riding, and swimming for me!
And not once did they stop to think that a simple X-Ray might be called for, at least until the parents finally put their foot down and demanded better treatment?
I don’t understand - wouldn’t the first xray they take reveal a metallic battery, even a small one?
This is how the Reds (Red Chinese in this case) are trying to poison and sap our precious bodily fluids
I don’t think grain alcohol would have helped this little child.
Other than computers, my kids quickly get bored with electronic whizbangs and other pieces of plastic. The Wii is good, esp on days when the weather isn't conducive to outdoor play (video games AND exercise, I'm all for it!), but it's not like they agitate to play with it.
Blocks, Lincoln Logs, Legos, and Matchbox cars, though? They won't put them down and fight over who can play with what. I spent hours yesterday putting a train track together with my youngest, and rolling his cars around on it.
Bought my oldest a gyroscope (really, just a fancy top) to play with this weekend. He hasn't put it down since.
Oh Boy! Here we go again. A new need for some type of government regulation to prevent battery ingestion.
I look around in absolute astonishment at people my age (65) who actually lived our childhoods and survived in a world fraught with dangerous, killer toys, under the sink chemicals, bike rides without protective clothing, and a myriad of other horrible pitfalls and dangers around every corner. My God! We even had tops and marbles to play with!
We even played with........gasp.......mercury!
The fact is that you MUST WATCH YOUR KIDS and pay attention to what they are doing. YOU! Not the government.
We carried lithium battery-powered sonobouys aboard the P-3. They came with their own warning and emergency procedures for jettisoning then if they malfunctioned.
“Listen to me carefully”. I am a WATCHMAKER who has been dealing with “button batteries” since the early 1960’s. They are a simple, tiny, very useful article that can truly, if mishandled by DEADLY. You can (and do) sneer at the government that banned MERCURY batteries, but for once be grateful.
The original ACCUTRON watches utilized a MERCURY battery that was changable by the owner. Careless or unthinking disposal of the old battery put thousands of little children in danger of mercury poisoning. Little kids will ingest anything that will fit into their mouths. The digestive fluids in the human stomach will eat out the seals and metal of the battery rapidly.
The old Mercury and more modern Alkaline batteries are small, ranging from 4.8mm to 11.6mm in diameter. Those little ones are the size of normal pills and are swallowed easily.
Lithium batteries from 9.5mm to 25mm and, with most ranging around 16mm to 20mm are less likely to be swalloed, but still dangerous.
Many thousands of people attempt to change watch batteries themselves and are not aware of the potential danger of the smaller batteries.
Happily, for me, many people also damage their high grade quartz watches changing the battery.
NOTHING sounds easier than the phrase, “Change the battery” Nothing is more wrong.
Should'a called Dr. House....He would figure it out in a hour.
FMCDH(BITS)
Yeah, House would have been irritating for 56 minutes and figured it out with 4 minutes to go.
I agree...but you must get rid of the "TV" at the same time.
JMHO
FMCDH(BITS)
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