Definition

The Gastrografin Challenge is a diagnostic and therapeutic test used primarily in patients with suspected small bowel obstruction (SBO). It involves administering Gastrografin, a water-soluble iodinated contrast agent, to assess and potentially treat the obstruction.

Mechanism & Role

  • Diagnostic: Helps differentiate partial vs complete SBO based on whether contrast passes into the colon on imaging.
  • Therapeutic: Gastrografin is hyperosmolar → draws water into the bowel lumen → may help relieve partial obstruction.

Gastrografin (Diatrizoate Meglumine and Diatrizoate Sodium)

  • Class: Water-soluble, iodine-based radiopaque contrast
  • Osmolarity: Very high (~1900 mOsm/L)
  • Administration: Usually 100 mL orally or via NG tube, followed by an abdominal X-ray at 4–24 hours

Interpreting Results

  • Contrast reaches colon within 24 hrs: Suggests partial SBO, likely to resolve non-surgically
  • Contrast does not reach colon: Suggests complete SBO, likely needs surgery

Clinical Pharmacist Considerations

Parameter Details
Monitoring Electrolytes, signs of perforation, hydration status
Adverse Effects Nausea, vomiting, aspiration risk, dehydration (due to hyperosmolarity)
Contraindications Suspected bowel perforation, aspiration risk, iodine allergy
Counseling Ensure patient is NPO before test; warn about diarrhea and GI discomfort
IV vs Oral Oral/NG preferred for this test; not given IV for SBO evaluation