Left lateral decubitus position during sedation‐free transnasal endoscopy: A pilot study
Rose Lee, Yonna Oparaugo, Molly Mackensen, Katherine Vaidy

TL;DR
A pilot study shows that using the left lateral decubitus position during sedation-free transnasal endoscopy in children is feasible and well tolerated.
Contribution
This is the first study to explore the feasibility of the left lateral decubitus position for sedation-free transnasal endoscopy in children.
Findings
All 13 children successfully completed the TNE in the left lateral decubitus position.
Most patients had a high tolerance score, indicating good procedure tolerance.
Two patients with orthostatic intolerance completed the procedure without adverse events in the LLD position.
Abstract
Sedation‐free transnasal endoscopy (TNE) is a safe, feasible, and well tolerated procedure performed in children to evaluate the upper gastrointestinal tract. The procedural technique of TNE in children is adopted from procedural standards in adults, typically using the upright seated position. The left lateral decubitus (LLD) position may be preferred for optimal safety and visualization during TNE. This pilot study explored the feasibility and tolerance of TNE in pediatric patients using the LLD position. This was a retrospective review of 13 children who underwent sedation‐free TNE in the LLD position from October 2024 to February 2025 in an outpatient gastroenterology procedure suite. Procedure time, patient tolerance (TNEase score), adverse events, and patient demographics were collected and analyzed. A total of 13 TNE procedures were successfully completed in the LLD position.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAirway Management and Intubation Techniques · Anesthesia and Sedative Agents · Nasal Surgery and Airway Studies
