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Endoscopy equipment

From Surgopaedia

Gastroscope

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  • Standard scopes have a diameter <=10mm with an instrument channel of 2.8mm
    • Austin has the Olympus GIF-HQ190, which is diameter 9.9mm, working channel 2.8mm, working length 1.03m
  • Therapeutic gastroscopes have a 3.8-4.2mm instrument channel
  • Slim-calibre gastroscopes are available with diameters 4.9-5.9mm. The size of the working channel depends on the specific instrument
    • Austin's slim scope is Olympus GIF-XP190N which is diameter 5.4mm, working channel 2.2mm (too small for CRE balloons or NJ tubes), working length 1.1m

Biopsy forceps

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  • Forceps with a central spike can be helpful in taking biopsy specimens from a lesion that can only be approached tangentially
  • Hot biopsy forceps can be used to destroy small polyp up to 3-4mm. However, this can lead to surprisingly large delayed bleeds, and has therefore been mostly abandoned in favour of cold snare.
  • I think the width of open biopsy forceps is 6mm

Jumbo forceps

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Dye spray catheter

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Chromoendoscopy stains

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  • 1% acetic acid (Barrett's assessment)
  • 0.5% methylene blue (intestinal metaplasia in stomach, adenomatous polyps, Barrett's)
  • 2% Lugol's iodine (Squamous oesophageal dysplasia or cancer)
  • 0.2% indigo carmine (Barrett's oesophagus or adenocarcinoma)

Polypectomy snare

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  • Small (2-7mm) polyps can usually be snared with a 10mm loop

Electrosurgery

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  • Low-power settings are generally used (15-50W)
  • Pure coagulating current alone is probably safer and more predictable