If you are worried about bowel or colorectal cancer you should see our general practitioner (GP) for advice and health care. If he or she believes it is warranted, your doctor may refer you to a gastroenterologist or colorectal surgeon who will perform a colonoscopy.
Colorectal cancer is usually slow-growing and often no symptoms are evident in the early stages. However, the most common symptoms of bowel cancer include the following:
- Rectal bleeding
- Change in bowel habits including loose stools (diarrhoea) constipation or narrower than normal stools.
- Abdominal pain
- Feeling like your bowel isn’t emptying completely
- Stomach pain or cramps, bloating
- Sudden weight loss
- Inexplicable fatigue or tiredness (Anaemia)
If you have any of these colorectal cancer symptoms, see your doctor at your earliest convenience to discuss your health care. Your doctor may recommend a colonoscopy.
How You Prepare
Before a colonoscopy, you’ll need to clean out (empty) your colon. Any residue in your colon may obscure the view of your colon and rectum during the exam.
To empty your colon, your doctor may ask you to:
- Follow a special diet the day before the exam. Typically, you won’t be able to eat solid food the day before the exam. Drinks may be limited to clear liquids — plain water, tea and coffee without milk or cream, broth, and carbonated beverages. Avoid red liquids, which can be confused with blood during the colonoscopy. You may not be able to eat or drink anything after midnight the night before the exam.
- Take a laxative. Your doctor will usually recommend taking a laxative, in either pill form or liquid form. You may be instructed to take the laxative the night before your colonoscopy, or you may be asked to use the laxative both the night before and the morning of the procedure.
- Use an enema kit. In some cases, you may need to use an over-the-counter enema kit — either the night before the exam or a few hours before the exam — to empty your colon. This is generally only effective in emptying the lower colon and is usually not recommended as a primary way of emptying your colon.
- Adjust your medications. Remind your doctor of your medications at least a week before the exam — especially if you have diabetes, high blood pressure or heart problems or if you take medications or supplements that contain iron.
Also tell your doctor if you take aspirin or other medications that thin the blood, such as warfarin (Coumadin, Jantoven); newer anticoagulants, such as dabigatran (Pradaxa) or rivaroxaban (Xarelto), used to reduce risk of blot clots or stroke; or heart medications that affect platelets, such as clopidogrel (Plavix).
You may need to adjust your dosages or stop taking the medications temporarily.
What You Can Expect
During The Procedure
During a colonoscopy, you’ll wear a gown, but likely nothing else. Sedation is usually recommended. Sometimes a mild sedative is given in pill form. In other cases, the sedative is combined with intravenous pain medication to minimize any discomfort.
You’ll begin the exam lying on your side on the exam table, usually with your knees drawn toward your chest. The doctor will insert a colonoscope into your rectum.
The scope — which is long enough to reach the entire length of your colon — contains a light and a tube (channel) that allows the doctor to pump air or carbon dioxide into your colon. The air or carbon dioxide inflates the colon, which provides a better view of the lining of the colon.
When the scope is moved or air is introduced, you may feel abdominal cramping or the urge to have a bowel movement.
The colonoscope also contains a tiny video camera at its tip. The camera sends images to an external monitor so that the doctor can study the inside of your colon.
The doctor can also insert instruments through the channel to take tissue samples (biopsies) or remove polyps or other areas of abnormal tissue.
A colonoscopy typically takes about 30 to 60 minutes.
After The Procedure
After the exam, it takes about an hour to begin to recover from the sedative. You’ll need someone to take you home because it can take up to a day for the full effects of the sedative to wear off. Do not drive or make important decisions or go back to work for the rest of the day.
If your doctor removed a polyp during your colonoscopy, you may be advised to eat a special diet temporarily.
You may feel bloated or pass gas for a few hours after the exam, as you clear the air from your colon. Walking may help relieve any discomfort.
You may also notice a small amount of blood with your first bowel movement after the exam. Usually this isn’t cause for alarm. Consult your doctor if you continue to pass blood or blood clots or if you have persistent abdominal pain or a fever. While unlikely, this may occur immediately or in the first few days after the procedure but may be delayed for up to one to two weeks.
Results
Your doctor will review the results of the colonoscopy and then share the results with you.
Negative Result
A colonoscopy is considered negative if the doctor doesn’t find any abnormalities in the colon.
Your doctor may recommend that you have another colonoscopy:
- In 10 years, if you’re at average risk of colon cancer — you have no colon cancer risk factors other than age
- In five years, if you have a history of polyps in previous colonoscopy procedures
- In one year, if there was residual stool in the colon that prevented complete examination of your colon
Positive Result
A colonoscopy is considered positive if the doctor finds any polyps or abnormal tissue in the colon.
Most polyps aren’t cancerous, but some can be precancerous. Polyps removed during colonoscopy are sent to a laboratory for analysis to determine whether they are cancerous, precancerous or noncancerous.
Depending on the size and number of polyps, you may need to follow a more rigorous surveillance schedule in the future to look for more polyps.
If your doctor finds one or two polyps less than 0.4 inch (1 centimeter) in diameter, he or she may recommend a repeat colonoscopy in five to 10 years, depending on your other risk factors for colon cancer.
Your doctor will recommend another colonoscopy sooner if you have:
- More than two polyps
- A large polyp — larger than 0.4 inch (1 centimeter)
- Polyps and also residual stool in the colon that prevents complete examination of the colon
- Polyps with certain cell characteristics that indicate a higher risk of future cancer
- Cancerous polyps
If you have a polyp or other abnormal tissue that couldn’t be removed during the colonoscopy, your doctor may recommend a repeat exam with a gastroenterologist who has special expertise in removing large polyps, or surgery.
Problems with your exam
If your doctor is concerned about the quality of the view through the scope, he or she may recommend a repeat colonoscopy or a shorter time until your next colonoscopy. If your doctor wasn’t able to advance the scope through your entire colon, a barium enema or virtual colonoscopy may be recommended to examine the rest of your colon.
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