TraumaDentalPulmonologyAirway

History of Present Illness

Patient presents to the ED following a bar fight. He sustained blunt facial trauma resulting in the complete avulsion of tooth number eight. Patient was initially evaluated, deemed stable, and prepped for discharge before the unaccounted missing tooth was noted during morning rounds.

Patient Presentation
Facial trauma presenting with avulsion of maxillary central incisor (Tooth #8). A missing tooth in a trauma setting without a known location must immediately raise suspicion for foreign body aspiration or ingestion.

Emergency Department Course

Morning Rounds & Reassessment

00:10:39S01E01ED Bay
StableDr. Robinavitch, Dr. Heather Collins +1 more

Reviewing patient for planned discharge.

Details

Medical Decision Making

Noticed tooth #8 was avulsed and missing. When the patient could not account for the tooth's location ('Fuck if I know'), the attending correctly halted the discharge. An unaccounted missing tooth in a trauma patient with altered sensorium (from alcohol/head trauma) must be assumed aspirated or swallowed. Aspiration poses a severe threat to the airway and pulmonary parenchyma.

DDx:
Foreign body aspiration (tracheobronchial tree)Foreign body ingestion (GI tract)Tooth lost at the scene of the assault

Diagnostics & Findings

  • Chest X-ray (CXR)
Findings:
  • Complete avulsion of tooth #8
  • Tooth unaccounted for

Interventions

  • Discharge cancelled

โฎ‘ Outcome & Reassessment

Patient remained stable and was sent to radiology for the ordered Chest X-ray.

Lab/Diagnostic Review

00:17:48S01E01ED Floor / Doctors' Station
StableDr. Robinavitch, Dr. Langdon

Chest X-ray results resulted.

Details

Medical Decision Making

CXR confirmed the presence of the aspirated tooth in the lungs. An aspirated tooth is a nidus for bacteria (especially oral flora) and causes post-obstructive pneumonitis, which frequently progresses to a life-threatening lung abscess or necrotizing pneumonia if not retrieved. Immediate pulmonary consultation is required for bronchoscopy.

DDx:
Post-obstructive pneumoniaLung abscessAirway compromise

Diagnostics & Findings

  • Chest X-ray (Reviewed)
Findings:
  • Aspirated tooth visualized on Chest X-ray.

Interventions

  • Consulted Pulmonology for foreign body retrieval.

โฎ‘ Outcome & Reassessment

Diagnosis of foreign body aspiration confirmed; patient prepped for definitive pulmonary intervention.

Diagnoses & Disposition

Evolving Diagnoses

  • [Morning Rounds]Avulsion of tooth #8
  • [Diagnostic Review]Tracheobronchial foreign body aspiration (aspirated tooth)

Current Disposition

Admitted to Pulmonology / Awaiting Bronchoscopy

Casebook Analysis

Episode Context

This case functions as a brief, high-yield 'catch' during morning rounds to establish the baseline competence of the attending physician (Dr. Robby) and emphasize the rigorous attention to detail required in emergency medicine, while contrasting with the initial resident who was ready to mistakenly discharge the patient.

Attending's Review

Medical Accuracy

Highly accurate. In emergency and trauma medicine, a missing tooth must be accounted for. If it cannot be located, a chest X-ray is the gold standard next step to rule out aspiration. The show accurately states that discharging the patient would have likely led to a fatal lung abscess within a week due to anaerobic oral bacteria.

Complications & Errors
  • Diagnostic Error: The initial resident or provider who saw Charlie failed to account for the avulsed tooth and incorrectly cleared the patient for discharge. This is a classic 'anchoring bias' or 'premature closure' error where the provider treated the superficial trauma but missed the hidden threat.

Clinical Pearls

Always account for missing teeth in maxillofacial trauma. If the tooth is not outside the body, assume it is in the lungs or the stomach until proven otherwise by imaging.

Aspirated foreign bodies in adults frequently lodge in the right mainstem bronchus because it is wider, shorter, and more vertical than the left.

Untreated foreign body aspiration (especially a tooth covered in oral flora) carries a massive risk for post-obstructive pneumonia, lung abscess, and empyema.