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Please help! I am a nursing instructor and one of the clients on our floor has a Saratoga tube...I have no idea what this is. I am hoping that you can help me to explain it to my students are direct me to reference so I can learn about it.Thank you!
Beth
You are probably referring to a Saratoga Sump (Nasogastric Suction). A google as well as a dogpile search was not of much help in finding a definitive description. I believe that a similar named device (Saratoga Drain) may also be utilized as a cardio-thoracic device. Hopefully, some of the GI people on this board will respond with a more detailed answer. Is the tube extending from one of the nares and connected to a suction machine? If so, naso-gastric suction for stomach decompression/drainage.
As an amusing aside, I recall many years ago telephoning Hospital Central Supply requesting a Salem sump as my patient's regular NG tube was functioning poorly - probably adhereing to the stomach mucosa - and the Salem sump would overcome the problem. The Supply Clerk was not familiar with a Salem sump and replied "The onliest thing we has is a Sataroga Sump." I inquired "What?" The clerk responded, "You know, Sataroga - like the State.
My response was "No, Saratoga like the city in upstate New York." A personal trip to Central Supply resulted in finding a bin full of Salem sump tubes.
Good luck with the search.
Hi!
I'm new to the site, and I know this post is a bit old, but I have a little question about this drain system.
I'm still studying to become a nurse, and I was learning about the Saragota tube. I didn't quite understand, so I googled it, came to the conclusion the official term is Saratoga, but still don't know what it's used for.
During the lessons my teacher passed a few draining systems, one of them was a very big tube with a huge trocard. She said they were used in case of pneumothorax. Is this the Saratoga tube?
I'd like to excuse me for my English, I'm a Belgian student.
Thanks for your help!
Greetz, Uschi
Please help! I am a nursing instructor and one of the clients on our floor has a Saratoga tube...I have no idea what this is. I am hoping that you can help me to explain it to my students are direct me to reference so I can learn about it.Thank you!
Beth
I believe that you might have had the name of the tube wrong, since I have never heard of a Saratoga Tube, however there is a Minnesota Tube, which is used to stop esophageal bleeding usually from varices. The device has three balloons that are inflated to a specific mmHg for specified number of hours at a time. Not all the balloons have to be inflated together, either. It is only used as a last resort.
EndoRNCA3
Following up to my last post,
Here's a link to an article that talks about a Saratoga Tube. http://resources.metapress.com/pdf-preview.axd?code=k3n3gq429p3w27j4&size=largest
This states it is a surgical drain.
EndoRNCA3
Nurse Bethie
28 Posts
Please help! I am a nursing instructor and one of the clients on our floor has a Saratoga tube...I have no idea what this is. I am hoping that you can help me to explain it to my students are direct me to reference so I can learn about it.
Thank you!
Beth