A doctor has warned that a popular children’s toy can lead to deadly obstructions by ballooning to four times its size.
Dr Josh Trebach, an emergency medicine physician in Iowa, tweeted last week about water beads, small absorbent balls that have gained popularity as a children’s bath toy.
Dr Trebach said: ‘Friendly reminder that water beads (a popular kids toy) can swell up to over 400% their original size.’
‘If kids eat these they can suffer gastrointestinal obstructions.’
The beads are made from materials that absorb water. This makes them expand dramatically. However, when a child accidentally swallows them, but absorb water inside the body and expand, creating potentially fatal blockages.
The warning comes as several parents have sued makers of these toys after their children have been seriously injured or died.
Esther Jo Bethard (pictured) died in July after she ate a water bead, which swelled inside her body
Dr Josh Trebach, an emergency medicine physician in Iowa, shared photos on Twitter of water beads expanding four times their size
Water beads are typically used for sensory play and developing fine motor skills. They are also used as fluid absorbers in baby diapers, incontinence garments, and menstrual pads.
The National Poison Control Center says swallowing water beads can lead them to absorb fluid, which allows them to expand in the intestinal tract and cause life-threatening blockages.
In March, the US Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) and toy company Buffalo Games recalled more than 50,000 ‘Chuckle & Roar Ultimate Water Beads Activity Kits’ sold at Target after one infant was injured and another died.
The injured child, Kennedy Mitchell of Maine, was hospitalized after she swallowed one of the beads. She suffered a bowel blockage, which can be fatal as it cuts off blood supply to part of the intestines.
A first surgery was performed to extract the water bead, but damage to Kennedy’s intestines was already done.
Water beads are marketed as children’s toys or therapies for children with sensory processing or autism spectrum disorders
The 10-month-old went into septic shock, and had to be put on a ventilator. A second operation checked for any more obstructions, but none were found.
Two further surgeries were needed to remove the extra fluid in her intestines and take pressure off her organs.
The infant was able to return home soon after.
Last month, parents in California filed a lawsuit against toy company Orbeez after at least one child died as a result of eating one.
The CPSC estimates that there have been about 4,500 emergency room visits attributed to water beads since 2017.
Source: | This article originally belongs to Dailymail.co.uk
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