What is an enteral feed pump?
The
enteral feed pump is an electronic medical device that controls the timing and nutrition supplied to the patient during enteral feeding. Enteral feeding is a procedure in which the doctor puts the tube into the digestive tract of the patient to supply liquid nutrients and medicines into the body. Tube feeding is given to patients who cannot normally eat due to oral cancer, surgery, injury or other condition that affects normal ingestion and digestion process in the gastrointestinal tract. The enteral feed pump ensures that the correct amount of liquid is administered to the body during the day. From start to end, the mouth includes food, pharynx, esophagus, stomach and intestines or intestines that are responsible for final disorders, absorption and excretion of food. When this system is at risk, the patint may require enteral feeding. A tube or catheter can be inserted in several places, usually in the nose, stomach or small intestine, depending on the patient's needs. Patients can pto wipe this procedure if they have cancer of the mouth or neck, trauma into the mouth or neck, neurological disorders that prevent the patient from swallowing or eating disorder, such as advanced anorexia of the nervous.
The nasal tube is a non -surgical procedure in which the tube flows through the nasal passage of the patient, down the esophagus and into the stomach. Patients who are not eligible for the nasal tube, such as patients with an middle face or obstacles in the esophagus, can receive a stomach tube. During this procedure, the tube is surgically placed in the stomach, avoiding the nose, mouth and neck, but still uses the stomach. If the patient's stomach can not be operated, as the docators can instead insert a semnostomic tube (J-Trubice). J-tube is a feed tube that passes through the abdominal wall into the small intestine.
Once the tube is in place, the patient is attached to the bag containing liquid nutrition that drips the catétrem into the body. The amount of nutrition is inserted into the electronic enteral feed pump, which controls the nutrition flow so that the patient receives a measured amount of liquid continuously for 24 hours. Patients who administer enteral nutrition independently may decide to set their enteral feed pump in the cyclic cycle. This allows the patient to serve food for eight hours throughout the night, allowing a normal lifestyle without a pump during the day.
In general, the enteral compound pump is very accurate, but defects in electronic mechanisms can cause too much or too little nutrition to the patient. Many pumps come up with northern security features to make such a mistake very unlikely. The enteral feed pump may have "no single point of failure" so that the pump has either backup mechanisms if one component fails, or a sound indication that the pump is no longer working. These devices can also be equipped with a battery that appears if electricity was releasedon.