Nasal swab painful

Nasal swab painful

People often feel scared during the sampling process using nasopharyngeal swabs. However, is it really painful to use a nasopharyngeal swab?

It is certain that nasopharyngeal swab testing does not produce painful symptoms, but some patients may feel uncomfortable.

The doctor used a medical flocked swab to enter the nasopharynx and then took a small amount of secretions. The hospital can isolate pathogenic bacteria through bacterial culture.

During the operation of the sampler, the patient will have slight nausea and discomfort, which is generally within a tolerable range. The medical staff’s techniques are gentle and skilled, so there is no pain. We can check the bacteria that cause the infection through nasopharyngeal swabs, and select targeted drugs for treatment based on the results of the tests.

Which is painful, nasal swab or throat swab?

In contrast, nasal swabs are more painful. Pharyngeal swab is the behavior that doctors use a medical flocked swab to dip secretions from the throat for monitoring. During the collection of pharyngeal swab, the tested person may have symptoms of nausea and vomiting without other obvious pain. Nasal swab is to insert a cotton swab into the deep part of the nasal cavity to dip secretions for monitoring.

 

Application scenario diagram

Application scenario diagram

Why nasopharyngeal swabs are better than oropharyngeal swabs

  • According to reports in the literature, the positive rate of nasopharyngeal swabs is higher than that of oropharyngeal swabs.
  • The patient has good tolerance and can basically take samples without anesthesia after skilled operation
  • The exposure risk of the sampler is lower than that of oropharyngeal swabs.

 

 

nasal swab

How to use nasal swab

How to use CM nasal swab

Nasopharyngeal swab sampling process

Nasopharyngeal swab sampling process

1. Please keep the subject’s head still and remove the secretions on the surface of the anterior nostril.

2. Use a swab or other tool to measure the distance from the nostril to the root of the ear and mark it with your fingers.

3. Insert the swab gently and slowly through the nasal cavity (if both nostrils need to be collected, another swab should be used).

4. Swab to the finger mark or stay for several seconds after encountering resistance to absorb secretions (generally stay for 15 ~ 30 seconds, and then rotate gently for 3 times).

5. Gently rotate and take out the swab and place it in the virus sampling tube (transport medium); Break the swab tail rod along the breaking point and place it completely in the tube. Tighten the pipe cover.

6. Note the information of the tested person and send it to the laboratory for inspection as soon as possible.