Kimberly-Clark Health Care Presents an OR-Live™ Webcast - Endoscopic Placement Method of Balloon-Retained Feeding Tubes
23 May 2011
Kimberly-Clark Health Care posted on 6 May 2011an OR-Live™ webcast of its innovative method for percutaneous endoscopic placement of balloon-retained enteral feeding tubes on its website www.kcdigestivehealth.com. The procedure is performed using the Kimberly-Clark MIC, MIC-KEY Introducer Kit by John Fang, M.D., clinical director of gastroenterology at the University of Utah Health Sciences Center and associate professor of medicine at the University of Utah. Stephen McClave, M.D., director of clinical nutrition at the University of Louisville School of Medicine, moderates the procedure and explains critical aspects of the initial placement of enteral feeding tubes. The full 22-minute OR-Live premiere webcast is available for viewing after registering on its website www.kcdigestivehealth.com.
During the procedure, Dr Fang uses the Kimberly-Clark MIC, MIC-KEY Introducer Kit to facilitate the primary placement of a MIC Jejunal Feeding Tube on a 61-year-old male patient with perforated diverticulitis and difficulty feeding due to a tracheostomy. The Kimberly-Clark MIC, MIC-KEY Introducer Kit simplifies placement of balloon-retained tubes. The kit offers lowered risk for complications other procedures may pose (i.e., longer hospital stay, punctured colon, tissue damage, etc.).
The kit features tools designed to facilitate easier feeding tube placement including:
- Saf-T-Pexy with T-fasteners to secure the stomach to the abdominal wall.
- A proprietary serial dilator with peel-away sheath eliminating the need to repeat passing over a guidewire for each successive dilation.
"In some cases of initial placement of enteral feeding tubes, it is particularly important to secure the stomach to the abdominal wall, for example, in patients with [oesophageal] cancer or patients at high risk for displacing the tube post-procedure," said Dr McClave. "The MIC, MIC-KEY Introducer Kit provides one of the most efficient designs I have seen for initial placement of enteral feeding tubes."
"The serial dilator's peel-away sheath and absorbable Saf-T-Pexy sutures are unique aspects of the Kimberly-Clark Health Care introducer kits," said Dr Fang. "These features make the process of placing the feeding tube easier for the physician and help to speed recovery for the patient."
The Kimberly-Clark MIC, MIC-KEY Introducer Kits redefine initial placement by providing physicians with an innovative solution to safely and efficiently facilitate the primary placement of the Kimberly-Clark MIC and MIC-KEY Gastrostomy, Jejunal and Transgastric Jejunal feeding tubes, which provide delivery of enteral nutrition to patients requiring long-term nutritional support. This innovative product enhances patient comfort, physician convenience and safety for both.
Continuing the Kimberly-Clark Health Care tradition and commitment to innovation and excellence, the convenient, all-in-one package features the tools and devices to make patients' lives better, and physicians' lives easier. The Introducer Kit is available in Australia and New Zealand. Contact our Customer Care line at (AU) 1800 101 021 or (NZ) 0800 482 211 or visit our Digestive Health webpage.
Kimberly-Clark in the Healthcare Environment
Around the world, medical professionals turn to Kimberly-Clark for a wide portfolio of solutions that improve the
health, hygiene and well-being of their patients and staff. As part of their healing mission, caregivers rely on
Kimberly-Clark to deliver clinical solutions and educational resources that they can depend on to prevent, diagnose
and manage a wide variety of healthcare-associated infections. For more information about Kimberly-Clark Health Care and
products and solutions available, visit www.kchealthcare.com.
About OR-Live
OR-Live is the world's leading surgical broadcasting company, providing communication solutions to hospitals,
device manufacturers, and pharmaceutical companies that demonstrate, communicate, and educate the latest clinical
and technological advances in surgery to surgeons, physicians, allied health professionals, and consumers.
The OR-Live broadcasting network provides an intimate look at over 600 live and on-demand surgeries to a global
audience, streaming over 23,000 hours of programming each month. The OR-Live network can be found on-line at
www.OR-Live.com.