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 Dread the Colonoscopy    
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Al Valente

 

Dread the Colonoscopy and Do It Anyway

The procedure is surprisingly bearable but the payoff is extreme in averting colorectal cancer. If you're over 50, you need to do this, yes, need.

By: Al Valente

O.K. now that you're 50 years or perhaps older, it's time to have a procedure that nobody like to have…the dreaded colonoscopy. It involves swallowing your pride and allowing strangers to peer into your most private body part. But the procedure has actually become more humane in the last decade… and it most definitely can save your life.

News Anchor, Katie Couric lost her husband, Jay Monahan, to colorectal cancer in 1998. In her efforts to create public awareness about the disease she actually underwent a colonoscopy live on national TV. As Ms. Couric says, "A colonoscopy may not be on the top of your to-do list, but it is a lot more fun than being diagnosed with cancer".

Unfortunately, colorectal cancer is a stealthy and insidious disease, when it advances, oftentimes totally unknown to the patient, it can be a hard battle to fight. Contrastly, if potential problem areas are detected and treated early, colorectal cancer risk can be virtually eliminated. So, dread it and do it anyway.
healthy woman with weights
A colonoscopy is not anybody's idea of a good time, but the procedure itself is painless and it can save your life.
Advances in the procedure continue to move forward. As little as 15 years ago, one had to consume a gallon of horrible tasting fluid that tasted like sea water to cleanse the bowel, a tortuous task that could that could feel at home at Abu Ghraib . Today, with so many boomers having the procedure performed, colonoscopies and its precursor cleansing are far more humane and your dignity is far more preserved.

Colonoscopy defined: A diagnostic procedure whereby a colonoscope is inserted through the rectum to examine the entire colon, or large intestine. A colonoscope is a flexible tube with a light and camera lens at the end to examine inside the entire large intestine for abnormalities. It examines the entire five foot length of the colon.


The Incredible Feeling of Emotional Relief When It's Finally Done

When it comes to your health, ignorance is definitely not bliss. A time bomb can be ticking away in your bowel; it's best to know if there is and to have the bomb diffused.

Conversely, what you absolutely do not know for certain, can be cause for needless worry. We often hear about the prevalence of colorectal cancer and its morbidity rate and secretly worry we may have it. But, we tend to play ostrich, and merely hope that we don't have it.

A colonoscopy will unequivocally yield that answer within a week should a biopsy be taken.

When you get that clean bill of health, you have an incredible feeling of relief. It's similar to the feeling you get when you have all those moles on your body, and you know you did too much sunbathing as a teenager, and suddenly your dermatologist tells you they're all benign.

The really great news is that the early stage polyps are slow to turn malignant, sometimes they take as long as 10 years. So, when you get that clean bill of health from your doctor, you usually have a 10 year pass before your next procedure.

Colorectal Cancer - It's Serious

Colorectal cancer is not to be taken lightly. It does not discriminate, except perhaps for age. It affects both men and women of all races. It is most prevalent in people over 50 years of age, which is why screenings should commence at that age.

According to the CDC, it is the second leading cancer killer in the U.S. In 2005, 37% of patients diagnosed with colorectal cancer died from it.

But the good news is, if treated early, it can be virtually eliminated before it occurs by removing polyps which could potentially turn cancerous.

Economics of Colonoscopies

Colonoscopies are not cheap. They are generally performed in a hospital. Even though it's done on an outpatient basis, there is a prep nurse, a doctor that performs the procedure, the staff of nurses assisting her or him, and all those computers and probes.

If you had to pay for the whole thing yourself it could run between $2,000 and $3,000 depending on the medical clinic and location. That's a tough expense to cough up for a test that most likely will come up negative.

If you do have health insurance, the co-pay can range anywhere from $200 to $500 depending upon your insurer. Again, most likely you'll get a clean bill of health and you can spread that $500 over 10 years until your next procedure. That's only $50 a year for a lot of peace of mind.

Alternative Routines

You can discuss other alternative testing procedures with your doctor. The costs will vary. Although a colonoscopy is most favored since they are both diagnosing and removing potentially hazardous polyps. Ff some of these other tests are performed, a colonoscopy may also have to be performed anyway. Here are some alternative measures:

Sigmoid Screening

Think of this a colonoscopy in miniature. A scope is still inserted but only views the lower 1/3 of the colon where generally most problems occur. This is still invasive but scaled down version.

X-Ray

In this procedure, a barium enema is performed and X-rays are taken. The doctor can view the health of your colon from the outside. Polyps and other problem areas can be identified. But, obviously if polyps are found another invasive procedure needs to be performed to remove them.

Cat Scan

This a virtual colonoscopy where 3-D imagery gives your doctor a picture of what's happening on the inside. Similar to the X-ray, if you're clean, you're done, if not, another procedure needs to be performed.

DNA test

Exact Sciences, a Madison Wisconsin company, has developed a non-invasive laboratory-developed stool-based DNA testing service for the detection of colorectal cancer in the average-risk population. The big plus is that it is non-invasive, the downside is that there is no removal of polyps should they be found.



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Reviews Write A Review
by Silverback
Not quite right...
A colonoscopy does not make you bullet-proof against CRC. I just watched a good man die who had a clean colonoscopy 2 years earlier. Fast moving cancers, some of which do NOT follow the polyp model, beat the screen for certain. And yes it is an awful way to die (e.g. colon cells in your lungs). Not sure our war upon dysplasia makes sense (we don't cut off every mole). And I won't bore you with double digit miss rates, adverse events, etc. We have surgical procedure being dusted off on even low-risk individuals and it isn't okay (e.g. low-risk... female, exerciser, aspirin, D-3, no family history, dairy products, etc.). Women do NOT need a colonoscopy at 50 (male incidence is 35-40 pct higher and our onset is 10 years sooner). As for the procedure itself, you left off QUITE A BIT BECAUSE YOU DIDN'T ASK AND THEY DIDN'T TELL. 1. You will be told to strip down, put on a gown and not tie the back. You will be reminded to remove your underwear or panties. It's dehumanizing. The gown is worthless. 1b. You will posed. Left lateral, knees raised. You will be awake for this. 2. Your ass will be bared by a complete stranger. You may or may not be draped from above. A flunky gastro tech who just cleared his criminal check and GED will be at the foot of the bed looking up at you. You will be awake for this. 3. If you are a woman, this position brings your genitalia potentially into play. Unfortunately, the thinner you are.... 4. You likely won't be offered c-scope shorts because, gasp, it would add 0.5% to cost. 4b. You will receive a digital rectal exam... hopefully cold stone out but sometimes NOT. 5. You will be repositioned without your knowledge. You will not be told. 6. You will have someone push your abdomen to advance the scope. You will not be told. 7. You will wake up in a different position then you went out in. Anyone think this is acceptable when it does NOT have to be so to receive a colonoscopy. I don't. My point is not to attack C-scopes. They have a role. But the notion that they are a primary screen despite no controlled studies and surgical procedure status is ASSININE. We've had a good and getting better fecal DNA test that the ASGE and FDA will not let live until it clears a hurdle the colonoscopy never did. My real SCORN is for the industry that talks the healthy into early screens due to family history (get it when Dad died at 52... absolutely WRONG when Dad died at 75 of CRC...family history means ALL of family history...incluidng, particularly, age at diagnosis!!!!!!!!!) and continues to humiliate patients with procedures that do NOT make sense. My VENOM is reserved for an industry that humiliates human life in the name of operational efficiency. There is no reason you cannot be knocked cold, gown securely tied, no knees raised (rectum doesn't need stretching for anyone but the novice), c-scope shorts for everyone (especially women..geez...OBVIOUS), told how many times you were repositioned, where and why, told how many times someone pressed on your belly. But you see that requires time and humanity. Little wonder compliance rates stick in the 30s. Colonoscopies are administered in the medical equivalent of meat markets. The quality of care and empathy decrease as the day labors on. Your doc just wants to get in your ass, up your colon and onto the next $2500 payday as fast as is humanly possible. Do you get something out of the deal...yeah...probably. That's the best any honest persona can tell you. Are you unnecessarily humiliated in the process? Abso-freakin-lutely. Process speed over dignity and even quality of care.
by Derek
yes, but ...
It's my understanding that Katie had a VIRTUAL colonoscopy.

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