| Literature DB >> 26448883 |
Narjis Al Saif1, Adel Hammodi1, M Ali Al-Azem1, Rasheed Al-Hubail1.
Abstract
Nasogastric tube has a key role in the management of substantial number of hospitalized patients particularly the critically ill. In spite of the apparent simple insertion technique, nasogastric tube placement has its serious perhaps fatal complications which need to be carefully assessed. Pulmonary misplacement and associated complications are commonplace during nasogastric tube procedure. We present a case of tension pneumothorax and massive surgical emphysema in critically ill ventilated patient due to inadvertent nasogastric tube insertion and also discussed the risk factors, complication list, and arrays of techniques for safer tube placement.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26448883 PMCID: PMC4581497 DOI: 10.1155/2015/690742
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Crit Care ISSN: 2090-6420
Figure 1
Figure 2Complications of nasogastric tubes insertion.
| Organ/system | Complication | |
|---|---|---|
| Nasopharyngeal | Hemorrhage | |
| Ulceration | ||
| Oropharyngeal coiling | ||
| Eustachian tube misplacement | ||
|
| ||
| Larynx | Trauma | |
| Ulceration | ||
| Vocal cord dysfunction | ||
| Vocal cord paralysis | ||
|
| ||
| Gastrointestinal | Coiling | Knotted tube |
| Hemorrhage | Reflex esophagitis | |
| Ulceration | Pneumoperitoneum | |
| Perforation | Esophageal feeding | |
| Tracheoesophageal fistula | Sepsis | |
|
| ||
| Pleuropulmonary (2%) | Aspiration of gastric content/enteral feed: pneumonitis, pneumonia, empyema, abscess, and sepsis | Intrapleural placement: pneumothorax (60%), haemothorax, hydrothorax, and bronchopleural fistula |
|
| ||
| Mediastinal | Mediastinal misplacement | |
| Mediastinitis | ||
| Pneumomediastinum | ||
|
| ||
| Others | Nasogastric tube syndrome (upper airway obstruction secondary to ulceration of postcricoid region causing | |
| vocal cord abduction paralysis) | ||
| Intracranial misplacement | ||
| Erosion to large vessels | ||
Factors increasing the risk of nasogastric tube misplacement.
| NGT factors | Technique factors | Patient factors |
|---|---|---|
| (i) Fine bore | (i) Inexperienced operator | (i) Altered mental status |
| (ii) Stiff monofilament core | (ii) Incorrect patient position | (ii) Critically ill patients |
| (iii) Stiffening wire | (iii) Blind insertion | (iii) Endotracheal intubation |
| (iv) Absent radiopaque marker | (iv) Incorrect NGT length | (iv) Tracheostomy |
| (v) Flexible polymer constriction | (v) Repeated attempts | (v) Use of sedation |
| (vi) Insufficient lubricant | (vi) Use of neuromuscular blocker agents | |
| (vii) Anatomical facial abnormalities | ||
| (viii) Facial trauma/inhalation injury | ||
| (ix) Anticoagulation/thrombophilia | ||
| (x) Upper airway/esophageal injury | ||
| (xi) Nasopharyngeal pathology | ||
| (xii) Following lung transplant |
Techniques used to confirm NG position.
| The technique | Comment |
|---|---|
| Insufflation test | (i) Unreliable in small tubes or those with guide wire because of reduced airflow |
|
| |
| Gastric aspiration | (i) Normal gastric aspirate is clear to slightly yellow |
|
| |
| Aspirated fluid pH and bilirubin | (i) A pH less than 5 and bilirubin less than 5 mg/dL identified 98% of gastric sites |
|
| |
| Capnometry | Reported high specificity and sensitivity rate [ |
|
| |
| Capnography | Capnography was as accurate as colorimetric device for detecting CO2 during placement of NG tubes [ |
|
| |
| Magnetic guidance | (i) Relatively new technique |