Case Report: Esophageal balloon occlusion with a Foley catheter in high-risk sedated gastroscopy
Jun Hu, Fenfen Kou, Peng Jiang, Ping Zhao, Yanhua Luo, Bao Lang, Shaojie Zhang

TL;DR
A new technique using a Foley catheter balloon in the esophagus helped safely perform a sedated endoscopy in a high-risk patient.
Contribution
A novel, minimally invasive method for airway protection during sedated endoscopy in high-risk patients is proposed.
Findings
Esophageal balloon occlusion with negative-pressure suction allowed safe deep sedation in a high-risk patient.
The procedure was completed without hypoxemia, coughing, or signs of aspiration.
The technique may serve as an alternative to endotracheal intubation or awake endoscopy.
Abstract
Patients with altered upper gastrointestinal anatomy (such as after proximal gastrectomy) face a significantly elevated risk of gastro-esophageal reflux and pulmonary aspiration during sedated endoscopy. There is a need for safe sedation strategies in these high-risk cases. We describe a 56-year-old male with a history of proximal gastrectomy and chronic reflux who required an upper endoscopy under sedation. To mitigate aspiration risk, an 18-Fr Foley catheter with an inflatable cuff was inserted transnasally into the mid-esophagus under light sedation and local anesthesia, and the balloon was inflated with 20 ml saline to occlude the esophageal lumen. The catheter's drainage port was connected to wall suction at a negative pressure of approximately −20KPa to aspirate any refluxate below the occlusion. After deepening sedation (MOAA/S score ≤ 2) with propofol and alfentanil (without…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAnesthesia and Sedative Agents · Gastroesophageal reflux and treatments · Esophageal and GI Pathology
