Correct Answer: C. In complete obstruction ball and valve mechanism causes hyperinflation
Unilateral hyperinflation in acute-onset dyspnea in a child is pathognomonic for foreign body aspiration (FBA) with ball-and-valve obstruction. The mechanism is critical: when a foreign body partially obstructs a bronchus, it acts as a one-way valve—air enters during inspiration (when bronchial diameter increases) but cannot exit during expiration (when bronchial diameter decreases and the foreign body seals the lumen). This traps air distal to the obstruction, causing progressive hyperinflation of that lung segment or entire lung. The chest X-ray shows unilateral hyperinflation (hyperlucency) with mediastinal shift away from the affected side. This is the classic presentation of incomplete/partial obstruction in FBA. The ball-and-valve mechanism is the pathophysiological hallmark that distinguishes partial obstruction from complete obstruction (which would cause atelectasis/collapse) or no obstruction. In Indian pediatric practice, FBA is common in children aged 1–4 years, often involving peanuts, seeds, or toy parts. Recognition of this mechanism is essential for urgent bronchoscopic retrieval before complications like pneumonia or bronchiectasis develop.
Why the other options are wrong
A. Flexible bronchoscopy used for removal — This is incorrect because rigid bronchoscopy is the gold standard for foreign body removal in children, not flexible bronchoscopy. Rigid instruments provide better visualization, airway control, and ability to grasp and remove objects safely. Flexible bronchoscopy is used for diagnosis and visualization in cooperative patients but lacks the instrumentation for safe removal. This is a common NBE trap—students confuse the diagnostic tool with the therapeutic tool. B. Focal area of decreased air entry will be suggestive of foreign body — This is incorrect because decreased air entry suggests complete obstruction (atelectasis/collapse distal to the foreign body), not partial obstruction. In partial/ball-and-valve obstruction, air entry is increased (hyperinflation) due to air trapping. Decreased air entry would indicate a different pathology (pneumonia, pleural effusion, or complete FBA). The question specifically states hyperinflation, which rules out this finding. D. The child has developed acute laryngotracheobronchitis — This is incorrect because acute laryngotracheobronchitis (croup) presents with barky/seal-like cough, inspiratory stridor, and subglottic narrowing on X-ray—not unilateral hyperinflation. Croup is viral (parainfluenza) and causes diffuse airway inflammation, not focal obstruction. The unilateral hyperinflation is specific to foreign body aspiration, not croup. This option confuses two entirely different pediatric respiratory emergencies.
High-Yield Facts
- Ball-and-valve mechanism: Partial foreign body obstruction allows air entry (inspiration widens bronchus) but traps air on expiration (bronchus narrows, sealing the object)—causes unilateral hyperinflation.
- Rigid bronchoscopy is the gold standard for foreign body removal in children; flexible bronchoscopy is diagnostic only.
- Unilateral hyperinflation on chest X-ray with mediastinal shift is pathognomonic for partial/incomplete foreign body aspiration.
- Complete obstruction by foreign body causes atelectasis (collapse), not hyperinflation—the discriminating feature.
- Peak incidence of FBA in India: 1–4 years; common objects: peanuts, seeds, toy parts, button batteries (emergency).
- Expiratory X-ray or decubitus X-ray may show air trapping and mediastinal shift in partial FBA when inspiratory film is normal.
Mnemonics
BALL-VALVE FBA Bronchus narrows on Expiration (traps air) → Air enters on Inspiration (bronchus widens) → Lung Hyperinflatation. Partial obstruction = hyperinflation; complete obstruction = atelectasis. FBA vs CROUP FBA: Unilateral hyperinflation, history of choking, sudden onset, rigid scope needed. CROUP: Bilateral subglottic narrowing, barky cough, stridor, viral prodrome, no hyperinflation.
NBE Trap
NBE pairs "flexible bronchoscopy" with foreign body removal to trap students who confuse diagnostic tools with therapeutic tools. The question tests whether students know that rigid bronchoscopy (not flexible) is mandatory for safe removal in pediatric FBA.
Clinical Pearl
In Indian emergency departments, any child with acute unilateral hyperinflation and history of choking should be treated as FBA until proven otherwise—delay in rigid bronchoscopy increases risk of pneumonia, bronchiectasis, and mediastinitis. Always ask caregivers about witnessed choking or sudden onset during play.
_Reference: OP Ghai Pediatrics Ch. 12 (Respiratory Disorders); Harrison Ch. 289 (Aspiration)_