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endoscopy
When
your doctor needs information about your
gastrointestinal tract, you may be sent to the Endoscopy
Suite on the hospital’s second floor. While you are
under mild sedation, your physician will use various
diagnostic techniques to identify ulcers, bleeding,
tumors, polyps, diverticulitis or other stomach and
intestinal disorders.
Common procedures available in the department include:
colonoscopy, upper endoscopy, endoscopic retrograde
cholangiopancreatogram, and flexible sigmoidoscopy.
Appointments for these procedures may be made by a
referral from your primary care physician to a physician
who specializes in these procedures. You will
receive specific instructions on the preparation for
your procedure from your specialist.
On the day of the procedure,
please report to the hospital’s Patient Registration
Department. A transporter will escort you to the
Endoscopy Suite, where you will undergo the procedure
and rest until the sedative wears off. You
will not be allowed to drive yourself home following the
procedure. Please arrange to have someone drive
you home or accompany you home if using public
transportation. We also recommend that you have
someone stay with you for the remainder of the day.
The
following information, courtesy of the National
Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases,
provides you with more information about the specific
procedures available.
Colonoscopy
A colonoscopy lets the physician look inside your
entire large intestine, from the lowest part, the
rectum, all the way up through the colon to the lower
end of the small intestine. The procedure is used to
look for early signs of cancer in the colon and rectum.
It is also used to diagnose the causes of unexplained
changes in bowel habits. Colonoscopy enables the
physician to see inflamed tissue, abnormal growths,
ulcers, and bleeding.
For the procedure, you will lie on your left side on
the examining table. You will probably be given pain
medication and a mild sedative to keep you comfortable
and to help you relax during the exam. The physician
will insert a long, flexible, lighted tube into your
rectum and slowly guide it into your colon. The tube is
called a colonoscope.
The scope transmits an image of the inside of the
colon, so the physician can carefully examine the lining
of the colon. The scope bends, so the physician can move
it around the curves of your colon. You may be asked to
change position occasionally to help the physician move
the scope. The scope also blows air into your colon,
which inflates the colon and helps the physician see
better.
If anything abnormal is seen in your colon, like a
polyp or inflamed tissue, the physician can remove all
or part of it using tiny instruments passed through the
scope. That tissue (biopsy) is then sent to a lab for
testing. If there is bleeding in the colon, the
physician can pass a laser, heater probe, or electrical
probe, or inject special medicines through the scope and
use it to stop the bleeding.
Bleeding and puncture of the colon are possible
complications of colonoscopy. However, such
complications are uncommon.
Colonoscopy takes 30 to 60 minutes. The sedative and
pain medicine should keep you from feeling much
discomfort during the exam. You will need to remain in
the endoscopy suite for 1 to 2 hours until the sedative
wears off.
Preparation
Your
colon must be completely empty for the colonoscopy to be
thorough and safe. To prepare for the procedure you may
have to follow a liquid diet for 1 to 3 days beforehand.
A liquid diet means fat-free bouillon or broth, strained
fruit juice, water, plain coffee, plain tea, or diet
soda. Gelatin or popsicles in any color but red may also
be eaten. You will also take one of several types of
laxatives the night before the procedure. Also, you must
arrange for someone to take you home afterward--you will
not be allowed to drive because of the sedatives. Your
physician may give you other special instructions.
Inform your physician of any medical conditions or
medications that you take before the colonscopy.
Upper
Endoscopy
Upper
endoscopy enables the physician to look inside the
esophagus, stomach, and duodenum (first part of the
small intestine). The procedure might be used to
discover the reason for swallowing difficulties, nausea,
vomiting, reflux, bleeding, indigestion, abdominal pain,
or chest pain. Upper endoscopy is also called EGD, which
stands for esophagogastroduodenoscopy.
For
the procedure you will swallow a thin, flexible, lighted
tube called an endoscope. Right before the procedure the
physician will spray your throat with a numbing agent
that may help prevent gagging. You may also receive pain
medicine and a sedative to help you relax during the
exam. The endoscope transmits an image of the inside of
the esophagus, stomach, and duodenum, so the physician
can carefully examine the lining of these organs. The
scope also blows air into the stomach; this expands the
folds of tissue and makes it easier for the physician to
examine the stomach.
The
physician can see abnormalities, like inflammation or
bleeding, through the endoscope that don't show up well
on X-rays. The physician can also insert instruments
into the scope to remove samples of tissue (biopsy) for
further tests or treat bleeding abnormalities.
Possible complications of upper endoscopy include
bleeding and puncture of the stomach lining. However,
such complications are rare. Most people will probably
have nothing more than a mild sore throat after the
procedure.
The
procedure takes 20 to 30 minutes. Because you will be
sedated, you will need to rest in the Endoscopy Suite
for 1 to 2 hours until the medication wears off.
Preparation
Your
stomach and duodenum must be empty for the procedure to
be thorough and safe, so you will not be able to eat or
drink anything for at least 6 hours beforehand. Also,
you must arrange for someone to take you home--you will
not be allowed to drive because of the sedatives. Your
physician may give you other special instructions.
Endoscopic
retrograde
Cholangiopancreatography
Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP)
enables the physician to diagnose problems in the liver,
gallbladder, bile ducts, and pancreas. The liver is a
large organ that, among other things, makes a liquid
called bile that helps with digestion. The gallbladder
is a small, pear-shaped organ that stores bile until it
is needed for digestion. The bile ducts are tubes that
carry bile from the liver to the gallbladder and small
intestine. These ducts are sometimes called the biliary
tree. The pancreas is a large gland that produces
chemicals that help with digestion and hormones such as
insulin.
ERCP
is used primarily to diagnose and treat conditions of
the bile ducts including gallstones, inflammatory
strictures (scars), leaks (from trauma and surgery), and
cancer.
ERCP
combines the use of X-rays and an endoscope, which is a
long, flexible, lighted tube. Through it, the physician
can see the inside of the stomach and duodenum, and
inject dyes into the ducts in the biliary tree and
pancreas so they can be seen on X-rays.
For
the procedure, you will lie on your left side on an
examining table. You will be given medication to help
numb the back of your throat and a sedative to help you
relax during the exam. You will swallow the endoscope,
and the physician will then guide the scope through your
esophagus, stomach, and duodenum until it reaches the
spot where the ducts of the biliary tree and pancreas
open into the duodenum.
At
this time, you will be turned to lie flat on your
stomach, and the physician will pass a small plastic
tube through the scope. Through the tube, the physician
will inject a dye into the ducts to make them show up
clearly on X-rays. X-rays are taken as soon as the dye
is injected.
If
the exam shows a gallstone or narrowing of the ducts,
the physician can insert instruments into the scope to
remove or relieve the obstruction. Also, tissue samples
(biopsy) can be taken for further testing.
Possible complications of ERCP include pancreatitis
(inflammation of the pancreas), infection, bleeding, and
perforation of the duodenum. Except for pancreatitis,
such problems are uncommon. You may have tenderness or a
lump where the sedative was injected, but that should go
away in a few days.
ERCP
takes 30 minutes to 2 hours. You may have some
discomfort when the physician blows air into the
duodenum and injects the dye into the ducts. However,
the pain medicine and sedative should keep you from
feeling too much discomfort. After the procedure, you
will need to stay at the hospital for 1 to 2 hours until
the sedative wears off.
The
physician will make sure you do not have signs of
complications before you leave. If any kind of treatment
is done during ERCP, such as removing a gallstone, you
may need to stay in the hospital overnight.
Preparation
Your
stomach and duodenum must be empty for the procedure to
be accurate and safe. You will not be able to eat or
drink anything after midnight the night before the
procedure, or for 6 to 8 hours beforehand, depending on
the time of your procedure. Also, the physician will
need to know whether you have any allergies, especially
to iodine, which is in the dye. You must also arrange
for someone to take you home--you will not be allowed to
drive because of the sedatives. The physician may give
you other special instructions.
flexible
sigmoidoscopy
Flexible
sigmoidoscopy enables the physician to look at the
inside of the large intestine from the rectum through
the last part of the colon, called the sigmoid or
descending colon. Physicians may use the procedure to
find the cause of diarrhea, abdominal pain, or
constipation. They also use it to look for early signs
of cancer in the descending colon and rectum.
With flexible
sigmoidoscopy, the physician can see bleeding,
inflammation, abnormal growths, and ulcers in the
descending colon and rectum. Flexible sigmoidoscopy is
not sufficient to detect polyps or cancer in the
ascending or transverse colon (two-thirds of the colon).
For the
procedure, you will lie on your left side on the
examining table. The physician will insert a short,
flexible, lighted tube into your rectum and slowly guide
it into your colon. The tube is called a sigmoidoscope.
The scope transmits an image of the inside of the rectum
and colon, so the physician can carefully examine the
lining of these organs. The scope also blows air into
these organs, which inflates them and helps the
physician see better.
If anything
unusual is in your rectum or colon, like a polyp or
inflamed tissue, the physician can remove a piece of it
using instruments inserted into the scope. The physician
will send that piece of tissue (biopsy) to the lab for
testing.
Bleeding and
puncture of the colon are possible complications of
sigmoidoscopy. However, such complications are uncommon.
Flexible
sigmoidoscopy takes 10 to 20 minutes. During the
procedure, you might feel pressure and slight cramping
in your lower abdomen. You will feel better afterward
when the air leaves your colon.
Preparation
The colon and
rectum must be completely empty for flexible
sigmoidoscopy to be thorough and safe, so the physician
will probably tell you to drink only clear liquids for
12 to 24 hours beforehand. A liquid diet means fat-free
bouillon or broth, gelatin, strained fruit juice, water,
plain coffee, plain tea, or diet soda. The night before
or right before the procedure, you may also be given an
enema, which is a liquid solution that washes out the
intestines. Your physician may give you other special
instructions. |