Also, catheter is the flimsiest, as well (esp 7Fr)
(3/)
Endoclot and Nexpowder produce a continuous flow of ROOM AIR (not CO2), and the powder is propelled by the air stream. This makes the catheters impossible to clog.
However, risk of barotrauma is greater with effectively continuous insufflation of room air.
(4/)
One must desufflate lumen constantly including during catheter passage.
After powder Hemospray deployment, desufflating tends to gunk the accessory channel, precluding another catheter passage.
This is less of an issue with Endoclot and Nexpowder (less airborne)
(5/)
Hemospray has by far the most generous amount of powder (20g) vs Nexpowder (3g) and Endoclot (3 or 5g).
Thus, there is some risk of running out of powder with latter 2. I have never run out of Hemospray. If you run out of Hemospray, it’s not going to stop with more.
(6/)
Endoclot and Nexpowder have adjustable flow rates!
Hemospray has one speed: super high. This produces a snowstorm effect (esp if auto fire) and worst visualization but can dump tons of powder on torrential bleeds.
Semi-auto fire and keeping 1-2 cm distance reduces this.
(7/)
The adjustable flow rate of Endoclot and Nexpowder preserve visualization. They allow a controlled application, ramping up easily.
Endoclot requires tilting and tapping the powder out of a bellow into air stream and is much less elegant than Nexpowder’s adjustable lever
(8/)
Powder adherence is best with Nexpowder bc it forms a sticky blue gel, not easily washed off. Endoclot forms a translucent film but washes off easily like Hemospray which forms an opaque white cake.
Visualization is a wash (pun!) between Endoclot and Nexpowder.
(9/)
The gel of Nexpowder (lasts 3d) is not FDA approved for EMR/ESD prophylaxis against rebleeding (like Purastat below) but research is warranted.
…prophylaxis against peptic ulcer rebleeding?
(10/)
The learning curve of deployment for the technician (hardest to easiest):
Endoclot > Nexpowder > Hemospray
The powder deployment of Endoclot is crude and less responsive (tapping a ketchup bottle), and thus you may shy away from it w/ inexperienced tech on call.
(11/)
Endoclot is the only system with reusable equipment: air compressor (mist being to bedside ICU bleede). It does have a battery though and is the most environmentally friendly
Nexpowder is the least so with internal batteries you trash after one use.
Endoclot does not have FDA approval for indication of Forest 1a (arterial bleeding) ulcers.
Nexpowder does not have FDA indication for lower GI bleeding.
Hemospray has the widest FDA approval: upper and lower non-variceal bleeds (including Forest 1a ulcers).
My opinion:
I will stick with Hemospray as the rescue device for active GIB. It has the best evidence and I won’t compromise in life threatening situations.
If there’s a very deep ulcer, then the CO2 propellant of Hemospray is safest (barotrauma).
With Bone wax tipped catheters or CO2 Borrow method (combined with 3-way stopcock), Hemospray should not clog and with 1T gastroscope, should allow suctioning as well.
The Difficult Colonoscopy is humbling to all endoscopists.
My Pearls :
#1 Female Patients
If hysterectomy or diverticulitis, use pedi colonoscope + water immersion. (Angulated colon)
If chronic idiopathic constipation or visceral obese, use adult colonoscope (redundant colon)
#2 Hard Turns
At a severe turn, a loop itself may form to obstruct your own view. Try hooking into the turn (ideally big wheel up) and pull back until the lumen winks at you. At that moment, you insufflate and let the scope go, like firing an arrow.
#3 Water Immersion
Start w/ water immersion in L colon
At transverse, switch to air #bc the air won’t expand the water-filled L colon, only R colon. R colon holds a lot of water (slows withdrawal bc suctioning lots of water!)
I have been wearing one since 2009 on surgery rotation as a student to the chagrin of nearly everyone associated with me. It’s no longer fashion faux pa at least in hipster Austin.