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Colonoscopy in America and Western society is one of the most well recognized screening
methods for colorectal cancer. What it allows us to do is find precursor lesions or polyps.
There is a well recognized sequence of events from finding a garden variety polyp in the
colon and having over time, that polyp turning into colorectal cancer. That usually takes
between 5-10 years. That's why we generally have screening intervals of 3-5 or 5-10 years
when we find a polyp.
We put people into categories: high risk, and low risk. Most people are somewhere in
between. High risk is people with family history of
colon cancer in someone who's young. We define young as under age 60.
We define low risk as people with no family history and are otherwise very healthy. Maybe
they have a little obesity or high blood pressure are the only health problems they have.
So, for an average risk individual who's in sort of that 'low risk' category, we recommend
for caucasians to begin screening at age 50. And African-Americans at age 40. The African
American data is relatively new in the last 2-3 years, but seems to have a lot of merit
to it in the medical journals.
People do think it's painful. I tell my patients it's not painful, but it's not comfortable
either.
I tell them we use a combination of medicines that, one of which is a pain medication. I
tell them again it's not a painful procedure but can be uncomfortable. We use that in conjuction
with something called ***. We don't use *** per se, but we use one of its cousins
called Verced. The two meds together work like a third medication.
They have a synergistic effect. That's how I address the sedation.
The bowel prep is something we're always trying to tweak and make better.
There are all kinds of bowel preps out there, there are Gatorade preps, there are other
volume preps. We've tried cutting the volume in half and using pills.
Everybody is trying to come out with something new.
The newest kind is called "split dose prepping." Anyone who does scoping should know about
this. You do about 2/3 the night before and the
last third the day of the procedure. It cleans the colon out much better; it's been proven
in many studies.
From a complication standpoint, any procedure that we do endoscopically has complications.
Most people come to find out when they talk to me or one of my partners that it's related
to the sedation. Too much sedation is a bad thing just like
too little can be bad from a patient standpoint. From the procedural standpoint, complications
associated with colonoscopy are pretty uncommon. I quote people about one in 2500 or 1 in 3000
will experience a complication like a hole in the colon or some bleeding after taking
off a polyp, those sorts of things.
My answer to anyone who is older than age 50 and hasn't had one is - they should.
Colonoscopy is the one test in the GI world that makes a difference every day. There are
lots of fancy procedures; some I do, some my partners do. But colonoscopy is a gastroenterologist's
bread and butter. It allows us to screen people and treat people
for polyps and cut down on that risk for colorectal cancer.
The cure rate when you find a polyp is excellent. It's 100% if you find it early enough.
If you find a precursor lesion or a polyp with some pre-cancerous cells in it and you
take that out then the survival rate is excellent. It's the folks who don't undergo the screening
when they're younger and maybe when they have a change in bowel habits or have some blood
in the stool and they ignore that... unfortunately they often present later with disease that's
in a lot of places.