Stuart
Bradford
Last fall,
13-month-old Aidan Truett of
What they found instead was totally unexpected. The child had ingested a
“button” battery, one of those flat silver discs used to power remote controls,
toys, musical greeting cards, bathroom scales and other home electronics.
The battery was surgically removed the next day, and Aidan was sent home. But
what neither the doctors nor his parents realized was that the damage had been
done. The battery’s current had set off a chemical reaction in the child’s
esophagus, burning through both the esophageal wall and attacking the aorta. Two
days after the battery was removed, Aidan began coughing blood, and soon died
from his injuries.
To
this day, Aidan’s parents don’t know where the battery came from. “This is
something I would never want another parent to live with,” said Michelle Truett,
Aidan’s mother. “I was oblivious as to how dangerous they were, and I want more
people to know the danger.”
Such deaths are extremely rare. There were fewer than 10 documented during the
last six years. But ingestion of lithium cell batteries, which children may
mistake for candy and elderly adults for medication, is a surprisingly common
problem, documented this week in two reports in the medical journal Pediatrics.
About 3,500 cases of button cell battery ingestion are reported annually to
poison control centers. But while swallowing batteries has occurred for years,
the development of larger, stronger lithium cell batteries has increased the
risk of severe complications.
Data from the
Among the serious complications, the chemical reaction triggered by the
batteries can damage vocal cords, leaving children with a lifelong whisper.
Damage to the gastrointestinal tract means some children require feeding tubes
and multiple surgeries. “The injuries are so much more serious,” said Dr. Toby
Litovitz, director and lead author of both articles in
Pediatrics. “It’s like drain opener or lye. It’s not something you want
in the esophagus of your child.”
The batteries that pose the greatest risk are those that begin with the number
20, which stands for 20 millimeters. They are larger and stronger than older
models. Batteries numbered 2032, 2025 and 2016 are responsible for more than 90
percent of serious injuries.
“Industry has shifted to this battery, and it has very popular appeal,” Dr.
Litovitz said. “There are a lot of reasons why we want to use this battery, but
the problem is we’ve got to use it in a safer way.” Federal safety rules require
toys that use the batteries to have battery compartments that are locked with
screws. But devices intended for adults — like bathroom scales and remote
controls — often hold the batteries in with a simple plastic cover that can fall
off or be removed easily.
That’s what happened when 13-month-old Kaiden Vasquez of
Kaiden, who will be 3 in July, has recovered, although severe reflux after the
incident damaged his teeth. “I don’t allow any of those disc batteries into my
home,” said Kaiden’s mother, Amy Vasquez, who has three other young children. “I
never thought a remote would do so much damage to my child.”
When children ingest batteries, it’s usually not because they found one loose in
the home. In 60 percent of the cases involving children under age 6, the child
has removed the battery from the electronic device. The problem is that most
parents are not even aware when it happens, yet studies show the battery begins
to cause severe damage within just two hours of ingestion. “It’s really a tight
timeline, because a lot of these cases aren’t witnessed,” Dr. Litovitz said.
“Children present with symptoms that are nonspecific, the parent doesn’t know
the battery was ingested — that makes it difficult for the doctor to diagnose.”
Dr. Litovitz said the problem needed to be addressed by manufacturers of
electronic products, who should secure the battery compartments in all devices,
not just toys.
“Children have ready access to remote controls, watches, garage door openers,”
she said. “Our major pitch is to get the industry to do something about the
battery compartment, but parents also need to know that they need to be dealing
with these batteries with a lot more vigilance and keeping them out of reach of
the child.”
Cara George of