Gastric lavage, also commonly called a stomach pump, is the process of cleaning out the contents of the stomach. It has been used for over 200 years as a means of eliminating poisons from the stomach. Such devices are normally used on a person who has ingested a poison or overdosed on a drug. They may also be used prior to surgery, to clear the contents of the digestive tract before it is opened.
Gastric lavage is used infrequently in modern poisonings and some authorities have suggested that it not be used routinely, if ever, in poisoning situations. Lavage should only be considered if the amount of poison ingested is potentially life threatening and the proceedure can be performed within 60 minutes of ingestion.
Lavage is contraindicated when patients have a compromised, unprotected airway and in patients at risk of gatrointestinal hemorrhage or perforation. Relative contraindications include when the poisoning is due to a corrosive substance (), hydrocarbons (), or for poisons that have an effective antidote.
Many complications have been reported although it appears serious complications are uncommon. The most dangerous risk is aspiration pneumonia, this is more likely to occur if hydrocarbons are ingested or in patients without a protected airway. Other complications include laryngospasm, hypoxia, bradycardia, epistaxis, hyponatremia, hypochloremia, water intoxication, or mechanical injury to the stomach.
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