Prophylactic nasogastric decompression after abdominal surgery

R Nelson, S Edwards, B Tse, R Nelson, S Edwards, B Tse

Abstract

Background: Routine use of nasogastric tubes after abdominal operations is intended to hasten the return of bowel function, prevent pulmonary complications, diminish the risk of anastomotic leakage, increase patient comfort and shorten hospital stay.

Objectives: To investigate the efficacy of routine nasogastric decompression after abdominal surgery in achieving each of the above goals.

Search strategy: Search terms were nasogastric, tubes, randomised, using MEDLINE, EMBASE, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (Central), and references of included studies, from 1966 through 2006.

Selection criteria: Patients having abdominal operations of any type, emergency or elective, who were randomised prior tot he completion of the operation to receive a nasogastric tube and keep it in place until intestinal function had returned, versus those receiving either no tube or early tube removal, in surgery, in recovery or within 24 hours of surgery. Excluded will be randomised studies involving laparoscopic abdominal surgery and patient groups having gastric decompression through gastrostomy.

Data collection and analysis: Data were abstracted onto a form that assessed study eligibility, as defined above, quality related to randomizations, allocation concealment, study size and dropouts, interventions, including timing and duration of intubation, outcomes that included time to flatus, pulmonary complications, wound infection, anastomotic leak, length of stay, death, nausea, vomiting, tube reinsertion, subsequent ventral hernia.

Main results: 33 studies fulfilled eligibility criteria, encompassing 5240 patients, 2628 randomised to routine tube use, and 2612 randomised to selective or No Tube use. Patients not having routine tube use had an earlier return of bowel function (p<0.00001), a decrease in pulmonary complications (p=0.01) and an insignificant trend toward increase in risk of wound infection (p=0.22) and ventral hernia (0.09). Anastomotic leak was no different between groups (p=0.70). Vomiting seemed to favour routine tube use, but with increased patient discomfort. Length of stay was shorter when no tube was used but the heterogeneity encountered in these analyses make rigorous conclusion difficult to draw for this outcome. No adverse events specifically related to tube insertion (direct tube trauma) were reported. Other outcomes were reported with insufficient frequency to be informative.

Authors' conclusions: Routine nasogastric decompression does not accomplish any of its intended goals and so should be abandoned in favour of selective use of the nasogastric tube.

Conflict of interest statement

None known

Figures

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Funnel plot of comparison: 1 Time to Flatus, outcome: 1.1 Does Postoperative nasogastric decompression hasten recovery of gastrointestinal function?.
1.1. Analysis
1.1. Analysis
Comparison 1 Time to Flatus, Outcome 1 Does Postoperative nasogastric decompression hasten recovery of gastrointestinal function?.
2.1. Analysis
2.1. Analysis
Comparison 2 Pulmonary Complications, Outcome 1 Does post‐operative nasogastric decompression diminish the risk of pulmonary complications?.
3.1. Analysis
3.1. Analysis
Comparison 3 Wound Infection, Outcome 1 Does post‐operative nasogastric decompression diminish the risk if wound infection?.
4.1. Analysis
4.1. Analysis
Comparison 4 Length of Post‐operative Stay, Outcome 1 Does post‐operative nasogastric decompression shorten the lenght of stay?.
5.1. Analysis
5.1. Analysis
Comparison 5 Gastric upset, Outcome 1 How many patients have gastric upset (vomiting)?.
6.1. Analysis
6.1. Analysis
Comparison 6 Anastomotic Leak, Outcome 1 Does the nasogastric tube prevent anastomotic leak?.
7.1. Analysis
7.1. Analysis
Comparison 7 Incisional Hernia, Outcome 1 Does NG Tube use lessen the Risk of Incisional Hernia?.
8.1. Analysis
8.1. Analysis
Comparison 8 Sensitivity Analysis: Time to Flatus, Outcome 1 Time To Flatus: Only Studies providing precise Standard Deviations.
9.1. Analysis
9.1. Analysis
Comparison 9 Colon Surgery, Outcome 1 Time To Flatus.
9.2. Analysis
9.2. Analysis
Comparison 9 Colon Surgery, Outcome 2 Pulmonary Complications.
9.3. Analysis
9.3. Analysis
Comparison 9 Colon Surgery, Outcome 3 Anastomotic Leak.
10.1. Analysis
10.1. Analysis
Comparison 10 Gastroduodenal Surgery, Outcome 1 Time to flatus.
10.2. Analysis
10.2. Analysis
Comparison 10 Gastroduodenal Surgery, Outcome 2 Pulmonary Complications.
10.3. Analysis
10.3. Analysis
Comparison 10 Gastroduodenal Surgery, Outcome 3 Wound Infection.

Source: PubMed

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