Nasogastric tube positioning
Citation, DOI, disclosures and article data
At the time the article was created Ian Bickle had no recorded disclosures.
View Ian Bickle's current disclosuresAt the time the article was last revised Ashesh Ishwarlal Ranchod had no financial relationships to ineligible companies to disclose.
View Ashesh Ishwarlal Ranchod's current disclosures- NG tube position
- NGT position
- Evaluation of nasogastric tube position
Assessment of nasogastric (NG) tube positioning is a key competency of all doctors as unidentified malpositioning may have dire consequences, including death.
Radiographic features
Plain radiograph
A correctly placed nasogastric tube should 10:
- descend in the midline, following the path of the esophagus and avoiding the contours of the bronchi
- clearly bisect the carina or bronchi
- cross the diaphragm in the midline
- have its tip visible below the left hemidiaphragm
Ideally, the tip should be at least 10 cm beyond the gastro-esophageal junction 1.
Malpositioning may include tip position:
- remaining in the esophagus
- traversing either bronchus or more distally into the lung
- coiled in the upper airway
- intracranial insertion, possible in both patients with and without skull base trauma or surgery 2
- spinal canal insertion is very rare, occurring after skull base surgery in one case report 8,9
In some circumstances fluoroscopic nasojejunal tube insertion is necessary.
Ultrasound
Point-of-care ultrasonography may be used to guide the nasogastric tube in real-time with the probe placed sequentially in the following locations 7:
- anterolateral neck
- cervical esophagus typically visualized to the left, posterolateral to the trachea
- an intraluminal curvilinear echogenic interface represents esophageal placement of the tube
- epigastrium
- with a longitudinal view of the gastroesophageal junction, the nasogastric tube may be advanced into the stomach under direct visualization
- oblique and sagittal scan planes to view the tube coursing through the gastric fundus and terminating in the antrum, confirming correct placement
Complications
Overall, complications occur in 1-3% of cases, with fatal sequelae in ~0.3% of cases. Complications include 1-6,8,9:
- upper airway
- epistaxis from insertion trauma
- lower airway
- enteral
- GI perforation and mediastinitis or peritonitis
- may further complicate with intravascular placement
- GI obstruction
- knotting/tangling of the tube
- intramural esophageal dissection
- GI perforation and mediastinitis or peritonitis
- intracranial and spinal canal
- meningitis
- focal neurological deficits
Quiz questions
References
- 1. Pillai JB, Vegas A, Brister S. Thoracic complications of nasogastric tube: review of safe practice. Interact Cardiovasc Thorac Surg. 2005;4 (5): 429-33. doi:10.1510/icvts.2005.109488 - Pubmed citation
- 2. Freij RM, Mullett ST. Inadvertent intracranial insertion of a nasogastric tube in a non-trauma patient. (1997) Journal of accident & emergency medicine. 14 (1): 45-7. Pubmed
- 3. Isik A, Firat D, Peker K, Sayar I, et al. A case report of esophageal perforation: Complication of nasogastric tube placement. (2014) American Journal of Case Reports. 15: 168. doi:10.12659/AJCR.890260 - Pubmed
- 4. Tai CM, Wang HP, Lee CT, et al. Esophageal obstruction by a tangled nasogastric tube. (2010) Gastrointestinal endoscopy. 72 (5): 1057-8. doi:10.1016/j.gie.2010.03.1131 - Pubmed
- 5. Hutchinson R, Ahmed AR, Menzies D. A case of intramural oesophageal dissection secondary to nasogastric tube insertion. (2008) Annals of the Royal College of Surgeons of England. 90 (7): W4-7. doi:10.1308/147870808X303128 - Pubmed
- 6. Duthorn L, Steinberg HS, Hauser H, et al. Accidental Intravascular Placement of a Feeding Tube . (1998) Anesthesiology: The Journal of the American Society of Anesthesiologists. 89 (1): 251.
- 7. Zatelli M, Vezzali N. 4-Point ultrasonography to confirm the correct position of the nasogastric tube in 114 critically ill patients. (2017) Journal of ultrasound. 20 (1): 53-58. doi:10.1007/s40477-016-0219-0 - Pubmed
- 8. Hanna AS, Grindle CR, Patel AA, et al. Inadvertent insertion of nasogastric tube into the brain stem and spinal cord after endoscopic skull base surgery. (2012) American journal of otolaryngology. 33 (1): 178-80. doi:10.1016/j.amjoto.2011.04.001 - Pubmed
- 9. Vahid B. Inadvertent placement of a feeding tube in brainstem and spinal cord. (2007) Internal medicine journal. 37 (8): 577-8. doi:10.1111/j.1445-5994.2007.01410.x - Pubmed
- 10. NHS Improvement, Resource set - Initial placement checks for nasogastric and orogastric tubes. https://improvement.nhs.uk/documents/193/Resource_set_-_Initial_placement_checks_for_NG_tubes_1.pdf
Incoming Links
- Medical devices in the thorax
- Synechiae
- Gastric emphysema
- Oesophageal temperature probe
- Water-soluble contrast challenge
- Lines and tubes (radiograph)
- Gastro-oesophageal junction
- Review areas on chest radiograph
- Nasogastric tube position on chest x-ray (summary)
- Chest radiograph assessment using ABCDEFGHI
- Oesophageal intubation
- Bronchopleural fistula
- Pneumothorax
- Small bowel obstruction
- Oxygen masks
- Esophageal balloon tamponade device
- Malpositioned PICC and necrotising enterocolitis (NEC)
- Umbilical venous catheter-related hepatic fluid collection (TPNoma) and abscess formation
- Malpositioned nasogastric tube
- Over-the-scope-clip (OTSC)
- Malpositioned nasogastric tube
- Transfusion-related acute lung injury (TRALI)
- Kinked nasogastric tube
- Congenital diaphragmatic hernia
- Spinnaker sign - pneumomediastinum
- Nasogastric tube terminating in left bronchus
- Misplaced nasogastric tube - right main bronchus
- Nasogastric tube position confirmation
- Graft versus host disease
- Small bowel obstruction and choledocholithiasis
- Misplaced nasogastric tube
- Chalk stick fracture
- Malpositioned nasogastric tube
- Malpositioned nasogastric tube
- Normal positioning of chest lines and tubes (portable radiograph)
- Feeding tube in the pleural space
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