A comparison of balloon and nonballoon gastrostomy tubes in children

Space: StayCurrentMD Author: Victoria L. Bentley, Natashia M. Seemann, Christopher Blackmore Published:

Author / Expert

Victoria L. Bentley, Natashia M. Seemann, Christopher Blackmore

Topic overview

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this study was to compare primary outcomes following insertion of balloon and nonballoon gastrostomy tubes (G-tubes).

Methods

A retrospective chart review over a 5-year period comparing the need for emergency, radiologic, or operative interventions between balloon and nonballoon G-tube devices was performed.

Results

145 patient charts were reviewed (46.8% female, 53.1% male). The indication for G-tube insertion was failure to thrive in 83.4%. Average age at insertion was 4.3 years (0–17.9 years). 37.2% had a balloon type G-tube, and 62.8% had a nonballoon type. Patients with a nonballoon device had 1.14 (0–15) ER visits related to the G-tube vs. 0.48 (0–6) visits with a balloon device. Of the ER visits for patients with a nonballoon device, 26.9% were replaced in ER, 38.5% in radiology, and 34.6% required an operation for replacement. For patients with a balloon device, 47.8% were replaced in the ER, 52.2% were replaced in radiology (GJ), and none required operative replacement. The majority of patients who initially had a nonballoon G-tube placed required a second operation for device change (95.7%). Patients with nonballoon devices required significantly more operations (average 2.55, range 0–16) vs patients with balloon devices (average 0.40, range 0–3) (p 

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