RT Book, Section A1 Reichman, Eric F. SR Print(0) ID 57706209 T1 Chapter 60. Gastric Lavage T2 Emergency Medicine Procedures, 2e YR 2013 FD 2013 PB The McGraw-Hill Companies PP New York, NY SN 978-0-07-161352-1 LK accessemergencymedicine.mhmedical.com/content.aspx?aid=57706209 RD 2024/04/19 AB Gastric lavage is a method of gastrointestinal decontamination, performed in the setting of an acute poisoning by ingestion, to decrease the absorption of substances in the stomach. This technique was first described in 1812 and has been used for nearly 200 years.1 It was repopularized in the 1950s and 1960s and thrived during the heyday of the “tricyclic era” of the 1970s and 1980s. The use of gastric lavage in the Emergency Department has decreased greatly in modern toxicology for several reasons. Most notable is the trend toward evidence-based medicine and the growing body of experimental and clinical data pointing to the limited efficacy of gastric lavage. Gastric lavage was performed in approximately 10.3% of all ED-treated poisoning cases between 1998 and 2003, a decrease from 18.7% during the period of 1993 through 1997.2 The increasing use of other modalities for gut decontamination, especially activated charcoal, has further limited the role of gastric lavage.1,3