Barium vs Gastrografin for esophagogoscopy
KMATTOX at aol.com
KMATTOX at aol.com
Mon Sep 3 05:11:08 BST 2007
For me there is no debate. The preference for water soluble is an urban
legend, and based on ONE paper I can find in the Radiology literature relating
to problems in the ABDOMEN when barium is left in the abdomen after
perforation of the colon during Barium enema. There is virtually no DIRECT data
for the esophagus, so one must use indirect information.
Barium was used for decades for contrast bronchograms when bronchectasis was
common. The lungs tolerated barium very well. When gastrografin is
used, or any of the water soluble solutions, and there is aspiration occurs,
chemical pneumonia can be fierce. So score ONE for BARIUM.
Gastrografin has a habit of giving false positive results on esophagograms.
Barium has a much lower incidence of false negative results. SCORE one
for BARIUM
If one must put a risk of pneumonitis on the patient and use gastrografin,
one should accept the result ONLY if it is POSITIVE. Since one is doing an
esophagogram because they suspect an esophageal injury, if the results are
negative with gastrografin, then it should be immediately repeated with Barium.
Score one more for barium.
This is THREE votes FOR barium to be used the first time
If there is an injury and it is documented, then go to the OR and fix the
injury and clean out the barium. DOI NOT make a simple situation any more
difficult .
k
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