Endoscopy, Table of Contents Endoscopy 2002; 34(10): 847DOI: 10.1055/s-2002-34260 Images in Focus© Georg Thieme Verlag Stuttgart · New YorkA Rare Foreign Body: A Mouse Entrapped in the Adult EsophagusP. L. Ren 1 1Division of Gastroenterology, Department of Internal Medicine, Cheng Ching Hospital, Taichung, Taiwan Recommend Article Abstract Full Text PDF Download Figure 1 A foreign body entrapped in the esophagus is a rare finding in adults. It is usually associated with organic lesions, such as anastomotic narrowing or motor disorder. This particular 56-year-old man was suffering from epidermoid esophageal carcinoma. He had received a short course of radiotherapy, but later decided to investigate Chinese traditional therapy. He ate mice alive in the belief that a living mouse could dig through the narrow and rigid esophagus and thereby improve his dysphagia symptoms. After he had previously eaten 86 mice, a mouse became entrapped at the gastroesophageal junction. The mouse was removed using endoscopic foreign-body forceps. The endoscopic image shows the mouse and its tail, trapped at the narrow lumen of the gastroesophageal junction.