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Having a feeding tube
Before or after surgery, you may need a feeding tube to help you manage issues with eating and drinking, and get the nutrition you need.
You may receive all of your nutrition through this tube, or it may be used to supplement the food you eat.
| When feeding tubes are used | Some people with stomach cancer will have a feeding tube before and/or during treatment to help them maintain their weight and build up their strength. |
| How feeding tubes can help | This helps keep your weight steady and gives your body strength. |
| How feeding tubes are placed | A feeding tube can go into your stomach or small bowel. It may be placed through your nose (nasogastric or nasojejunal tube) or through your belly with a small operation (gastrostomy or jejunostomy tube). You might need the tube after surgery until you can eat and drink normally again. |
| How do feeding tubes work | A special liquid food (called formula) goes through the tube to give you the nutrients you need. If you go home with the feeding tube, a dietitian will tell you how much formula to take and how often. |
| How to care for a feeding tube | Your health care team will show you how to keep the tube clean and working well. The doctor will remove the tube when you no longer need it. |
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Prof David Watson, Matthew Flinders Distinguished Professor of Surgery, Flinders University, and Senior Consultant Surgeon, Oesophago-Gastric Surgery Unit, Flinders Medical Centre, SA; Prof Bryan Burmeister, Senior Radiation Oncologist, GenesisCare Fraser Coast and Hervey Bay Hospital, QLD; Dr Natalie Collier, Radiation Oncologist, Wollongong Hospital, NSW; A/Prof Melissa Eastgate, A/Executive Director, Cancer Care Services, Royal Brisbane and Women’s Hospital, QLD; Natalie Lalor, 13 11 20 Consultant, Cancer Council Victoria; Chris Menzies, Upper GI Cancer Nurse Consultant, Flinders Medical Centre and Southern Adelaide Local Health Network, SA; Tammy Milne, Consumer; Stefanie Simnadis, Clinical Dietitian, St John of God Subiaco Hospital, WA; Prof Rajvinder Singh, Professor of Medicine, University of Adelaide, and Director, Gastroenterology Department and Head of Endoscopy, Lyell McEwin Hospital, SA.
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