Pediatric Abdominal Pain: Boba Tea and Computed Tomography Findings: Case Report
Jesse Ewaldt, James Waymack, Sharon Kim

TL;DR
A child with abdominal pain was found to have bubble tea pearls in her stomach, showing how this popular drink can appear on CT scans.
Contribution
This case highlights bubble tea pearls as a novel, radiopaque finding in pediatric abdominal CT scans.
Findings
CT scans revealed radiopaque densities in the stomach of a child with abdominal pain.
The radiopaque material was identified as bubble tea pearls, a previously underreported finding.
Symptoms resolved without intervention, avoiding unnecessary procedures.
Abstract
Discovery of pearl-like, radiopaque foreign bodies is not widely documented in the literature. In this report, we describe an unusual radiological finding of bubble tea pearls (small, chewy spheres derived from cassava starch) on computed tomography (CT) from an increasingly popular drink among adolescents. An 11-year-old female presented to the emergency department with severe abdominal pain. Physical examination revealed generalized abdominal tenderness, with increased pain in the right lower quadrant. The patient’s history was concerning for acute appendicitis. Laboratory results were unremarkable, and ultrasound was inconclusive for suspected appendicitis. A contrast-enhanced CT of the abdomen found several ingested radiopaque densities within the stomach. Further toxicology testing was negative or within normal limits. It was later found that the patient had consumed bubble tea…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTherapeutic Uses of Natural Elements
