Originally Posted by janfrn
Once you think you're where you should be, you attempt to aspirate the tube. If the plunger is sucked back to the end of the syringe quite dramatically, that's a positive snap. There's usually no air in the pylorus and the space is like a vacuum.
Thanks for clarifying. We have a neat little bedside u/s machine and the tubes are placed by our CNS under direct visualization and are cleared right after placement to use. This is new within the last 6 mos. for us and since the tubes do occassionally migrate back into the stomach, maybe we should do this periodically? A lot of the kids get daily or qod CXRs and if they are small enough, the tube can be visualized but I'm wondering if we should be doing more.