| Literature DB >> 36196284 |
Nidhi Bangarwa1, Sumedha Vashishth1, Vineet Kumar1, Prashant Kumar1, Preeti Gehlaut1.
Abstract
Background Nasogastric tube insertion is a routinely performed technique in anesthetized and intubated patients. However, failure leads to repeated insertion attempts causing injury, which makes the situation cumbersome. Therefore, we introduce a simple technique of deflating endotracheal tube cuff for nasogastric tube insertion in such patients. Methods Eighty adult patients scheduled for elective abdominal surgeries were randomly allocated into two groups, Group A (nasogastric tube insertion without endotracheal cuff deflation) and Group B (nasogastric tube insertion with endotracheal tube cuff deflation) along with lateral pressure application at cricoid in both groups. The number of attempts required, overall success rate, the time taken, rescue maneuvers, and incidence of complications were compared between the groups. Results In Group B, the total success rate for nasogastric tube placement was significantly higher than in Group A (80% vs 55%, p=0.016). Group B had a 55% first attempt success rate, but only 25% of patients in Group A had a first attempt success rate (p=0.014). The overall time for successful nasogastric tube placement was longer in Group A than in Group B (65.4 ± 28.72 seconds vs 43.5 ± 25.37 seconds, p=0.0005). The differences in nasogastric tube kinking and coiling between Group B and Group A were not statistically significant (20% vs 22.5%, 10% vs 27.5%, p = 0.78 and 0.08, respectively). Mucosal bleeding was substantially higher in Group A than in Group B (30% vs 10%, p=0.025, respectively). Conclusions This study showed that endotracheal tube deflation significantly increased the first-attempt success rate, overall successful placement of the nasogastric tube in intubated patients, and incidence of complications like mucosal bleeding decreased.Entities:
Keywords: abdominal surgery; cuff deflation; endotracheal tube; general anaesthesia; nasogastric tube
Year: 2022 PMID: 36196284 PMCID: PMC9525043 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.28668
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Figure 1Study consort diagram
Demographic parameters. Values expressed as mean and standard deviation, n=number (%) where appropriate.
BMI: Body mass index, ASA: American Society of Anesthesiologists physical status
| Parameter | GROUP A | GROUP B | p-value |
| Mean age (in years) | 42.5 ± 7.133 | 44 ± 7.55 | 0.3639 |
| Male | 18 (45) | 24 (60) | 0.2629 |
| Female | 22 (55) | 16 (40) | |
| BMI (kg/m2) (mean ± standard deviation) | 15.53 ± 1.92 | 15.99 ± 3.759 | 0.3816 |
| ASA I | 12 (30) | 14 (35) | 0.8113 |
| ASA II | 28 (70) | 26 (65) | |
| Mallampatti score I | 10 (25) | 14 (35) | 0.4642 |
| Mallampatti score II | 30 (75) | 26 (65) |
Study parameters expressed as n=number (%). The time required is expressed as mean time and standard deviation.
| Parameter | Group A | Group B | p-value |
| First-attempt insertion | 10 (25) | 22 (55) | 0.014066 |
| Second-attempt insertion | 12 (30) | 10 (25) | |
| Rescue maneuvers required | 18 (45) | 8 (20) | |
| Successful insertion | 22 (55) | 32 (80) | 0.016984 |
| Time required in seconds (mean ± standard deviation) | 65.4 ± 28.725 | 43.5 ± 25.37 | 0.0005 |
Incidence of complications expressed as n=number (%)
| Complications | Group A | Group B | p-value |
| Bleeding | 12 (30) | 4 (10) | 0.02534 |
| Kinking | 9 (22.5) | 8 (20) | 0.7846 |
| Coiling | 11 (27.5) | 4 (10) | 0.08567 |