Full stomach - NYSORA

Explore NYSORA knowledge base for free:

Table of Contents

Contributors

Full stomach

Full stomach

Learning objectives

  • Outline the risks of having a full stomach in combination with anesthesia
  • Describe the factors that delay gastric emptying
  • Anesthetic management of a patient with a full stomach

Definition and mechanisms

  • In anesthesia, the term “full stomach” applies to patients that have recently ingested foods and/or have pharmacologic, metabolic, anatomic, or hormonal conditions, which impair gastric emptying
  • A full stomach and any reduction in the functional integrity of the lower esophageal sphincter (LES) predispose a patient to regurgitation
  • The active process of vomiting and the passive process of regurgitation of gastric contents are more hazardous in a patient with a full stomach
  • No patient can ever be assumed to have a completely empty stomach

General anesthesia suppresses the upper airway reflexes that prevent pulmonary aspiration of active or passively regurgitated gastric contents

  • Aspiration of solid material can cause a mechanical obstruction with subsequent lung collapse, pneumonia, or abscess formation
  • Aspiration of liquid (>25 mL, pH <2.5) can cause bronchospasm, pneumonitis, bronchopneumonia, and acute respiratory distress syndrome

Strategies to reduce the risk of pulmonary aspiration

  • Minimize residual gastric volumes → fasting (stomach is considered “empty” within 6 hours after food and milky drinks, 4 hours after breast milk, and 2 hours after water)
  • Rapidly secure the anesthetized airway

Emergency patients are more likely to have a full stomach as

  • Presenting pathology causes a mechanical obstruction (e.g., laparotomy for small bowel obstruction)
  • Surgery is urgent and cannot wait for the full fasting time
  • The surgical pathology results in pain and anxiety

Risk factors

Factors delaying gastric emptying

  • Mechanical obstruction of the gastrointestinal tract 
  • Ileus
  • Following surgical manipulation of the bowel (postoperative)
  • Recent trauma
  • Electrolyte imbalance
  • Peritonitis
  • Pain
  • Fear and anxiety
  • Third trimester of pregnancy
  • Drugs

Management

full stomach, management, preoperative, intraoperative, postoperative, lower esophageal sphincter, reflux, heartburn, hiatus hernia, meoclopramide, nasogastric tube, sodium citrate, H2-blocking drugs, proton pump inhibitor, opioids, anticholinergics, cuffed endotracheal tube, rapid sequence induction, preoxygenation, cricoid pressure, head-up position, lateral position, tilted head-down

Suggested reading

  • Pollard BJ, Kitchen G. Handbook of Clinical Anaesthesia. 4th ed. Taylor & Francis group; 2018. Chapter 4 Gastrointestinal tract, Jackson MJ.

Clinical updates

Sastre et al. (A&A, 2024) report that diabetic patients with dysautonomia have a significantly higher prevalence of a full stomach on preoperative gastric ultrasound (22.9%) compared with diabetics without dysautonomia and healthy controls, despite standard fasting. Solid gastric contents were also more frequent in this group, while gastroparesis symptoms alone were poor predictors of aspiration risk. 

  • Read more about this study HERE
Upcoming Events View All

From Fundamentals to Advanced Joint Interventions with Live Demonstrations Join us at the Hong Kong Pain Conference in May 2026!

X