Endoscopy 2007; 39: E276
DOI: 10.1055/s-2007-966616
Unusual cases and technical notes

© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York

Balloon-assisted enteroscopy using a single-balloon technique

D.  Hartmann1 , A.  Eickhoff1 , R.  Tamm2 , J.  F.  Riemann1
  • 1Department of Gastroenterology, Academic Teaching Hospital, Ludwigshafen, Germany
  • 2Olympus Medical Systems Europa GmbH, Hamburg, Germany
Further Information

D. Hartmann, MD 

Department of Medicine C

Klinikum der Stadt Ludwighafen GmbH

Bremserstraße 79

67063 Ludwigshafen am Rhein

Germany

Fax: +49-621-5034114

Email: medcluhartmann@t-online.de

Publication History

Publication Date:
24 October 2007 (online)

Table of Contents

    The prototype of the single-balloon enteroscopy system (Olympus Medical Systems Europa GmbH, Hamburg, Germany; [Fig. 1]) consists of a high-resolution endoscope (XSIF-Q160Y) with a working length of 200 cm, and an outer diameter of 9.2 mm, and a flexible overtube (XST-BY3A; [Fig. 2]) with a working length of 132 cm and an outer diameter of 13.2 mm. A latex-free balloon is only attached at the tip of the single-use silicon overtube, and is inflated and deflated with air from a pressure-controlled pump system (Olympus balloon control unit MAJ-1440).

    Zoom Image

    Fig. 1 Single-balloon enteroscope (XSIF-Q160Y)

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    Fig. 2 Overtube (XST-BY3A)

    The balloon on the tip of the overtube is deflated at the start of the procedure, until the duodenum is reached. The balloon is then inflated to maintain a stable position, and the enteroscope is inserted as far as possible. After this, the tip of the enteroscope is angled (and hooked behind a fold if possible) to achieve a stable position of the distal tip. Now the overtube balloon is deflated and inserted along the enteroscope until the tip of the enteroscope is reached. The overtube balloon is then inflated again. At this position ([Fig. 3]) there are two options to further thread the endoscope into the small bowel:

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    Fig. 3 Insertion options. Option 1: ‘Pull first, then push’ (conventional). Option 2: ‘Pull and push simultaneously’ (simplified).

    1. Both the enteroscope and the overtube are pulled back in order to shrink the bowel. Following that, as an additional maneuver, the endoscope is once again threaded into the bowel.

    2. The angulation is used to find the lumen of the bowel and then the overtube is pulled back and simultaneously the enteroscope is pushed forward into the lumen. In a two-examiner setting, this works best if one examiner is controlling the insertion tube plus overtube, and at the same time the other examiner controls the angulations in such a way that the distal tip always points into the free lumen.

    The two options for threading the overtube into the small bowel can be combined. In comparison with enteroscopy using the double-balloon technique, this newly developed single-balloon enteroscopy seems to be easier to perform and saves time.

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    D. Hartmann, MD 

    Department of Medicine C

    Klinikum der Stadt Ludwighafen GmbH

    Bremserstraße 79

    67063 Ludwigshafen am Rhein

    Germany

    Fax: +49-621-5034114

    Email: medcluhartmann@t-online.de

    D. Hartmann, MD 

    Department of Medicine C

    Klinikum der Stadt Ludwighafen GmbH

    Bremserstraße 79

    67063 Ludwigshafen am Rhein

    Germany

    Fax: +49-621-5034114

    Email: medcluhartmann@t-online.de

    Zoom Image

    Fig. 1 Single-balloon enteroscope (XSIF-Q160Y)

    Zoom Image

    Fig. 2 Overtube (XST-BY3A)

    Zoom Image

    Fig. 3 Insertion options. Option 1: ‘Pull first, then push’ (conventional). Option 2: ‘Pull and push simultaneously’ (simplified).