Twenty-six patients with possible esophageal disruption who were also at risk for aspiration or direct communication of the esophagus with the tracheobronchial tree were examined with iohexol esophagography. Fifteen patients had normal studies confirmed by findings at a barium examination performed immediately after. In 11 patients abnormalities were diagnosed on the basis of iohexol esophagograms; the abnormalities included extraluminal extravasation of contrast material (n = 7), aspiration (n = 1), esophageal stricture with intramural diverticulosis (n = 1), edema of the gastroesophageal junction (n = 1), and epiphrenic diverticulum (n = 1). Eight of these patients were immediately reexamined with barium esophagography, which yielded no additional information. Low-osmolality, water-soluble contrast agents are a safe alternative for patients in whom barium esophagography poses a risk of mediastinitis and esophagography with diatrizoate meglumine and diatrizoate sodium (Gastrografin) poses a risk of pulmonary edema.
Abdominal computed tomography (CT) scans of 55 patients who had ingested Gastrografin (meglumine diatrizoate and diatrizoate sodium) diluted to 2% with tap water and flavored with a commercial fruit juice base were reviewed. Twenty patients (36%) demonstrated intraluminal precipitation of Gastrografin shown by focal areas of markedly increased attenuation within the gastric lumen or trapped within gastric folds. Beam-hardening artifact produced by precipitation was observed, which limited the diagnostic value of some examinations. In vitro CT scans of the same Gastrografin solution titrated with hydrochloric acid or sodium hydroxide showed that by raising the pH of the solution, precipitation was virtually eliminated. Fifty-one CT scans of the abdomen using a buffered Gastrografin solution demonstrated precipitation in only five patients. Properly buffered dilute oral Gastrografin solutions should significantly decrease the prevalence of precipitation during abdominal CT examinations.
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