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DOI: 10.1055/s-0031-1291527
PEG tube placement in morbidly obese patients
Publication History
Publication Date:
06 March 2012 (online)
We present two patients both of whom had severe morbid obesity and needed placement of a percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy (PEG) for albumin and visceral protein replenishment. The first patient was a 53-year-old woman (body mass index [BMI], 85.8; weight, 191 kg) who presented with respiratory distress and dysphagia; the second was a 26-year-old woman (BMI, 88.6; weight, 259 kg) who presented with sepsis complicated by respiratory distress and dysphagia. Both women required placement of a PEG tube for long-term enteral nutrition.
In the first patient, transillumination was not possible due to the thickness of the overlying adipose tissue, so the site of needle insertion was selected by finger indentation/compression at the point where the abdominal wall appeared closest to the gastric wall. A 22-gauge, 8-inch long Tuohy spinal needle ([Fig. 1]) was then inserted through the abdominal wall into the gastric lumen as a tracer needle ([Fig. 2]). With the application of external abdominal compression, the spinal needle was able to reach the stomach and cause “tenting” of the gastric mucosa and gastric lumen. A 240-cm long guide wire (outer diameter 0.021 cm; Boston Scientific Corp., Natick, Massachusetts, USA) usually used in endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) was passed through the spinal needle into the gastric lumen, snared endoscopically, and pulled out through the mouth. The 22-gauge spinal needle was then replaced by an 18-gauge spinal needle and the 0.021-cm guide wire was replaced by a 0.035-cm guide wire, which was passed through the 18-gauge spinal needle. After this, standard methodology was used to slide the 20-gauge PEG tube over the wire and pull it out through the abdominal wall. The external bumper was located 8 cm from the internal bumper.
The technique for placement of the PEG tube was similar in the second patient except that a Boston kit wire (outer diameter 0.025 cm; Boston Scientific Corp.) was guided through the 17-gauge spinal needle and the PEG tube was placed over this wire. The Boston wire has a slightly larger diameter, which fits the tapering end of the PEG tube firmly.
This new methodology utilizes the availability of long spinal needles and ERCP guide wires to overcome the difficulty of reaching the gastric lumen in severely morbidly obese patients with extremely thick abdominal walls.
Endoscopy_UCTN_Code_TTT_1AO_2AK