TrackerFF
5 days ago
My entire adult life I've had a very unstable stomach, and for the past 6-7 years I've experienced pretty much every red flag, but they'd often come in waves - which would give me just enough time to back off from calling my GP.
Last May a good friend of mine, 35 years old, was diagnosed with stage 4 colorectal cancer. He had experienced on/off constipation and stomach pain for a month, but otherwise healthy. When he went to the ER they suspected volvulus, but scans showed a huge tumor blocking. Long story short, it was cancer and it had spread to his liver and lungs.
He's still alive, and responding well to treatment, in the sense that the tumors are shrinking - but in general the prognosis is poor. And he's been completely ravaged by the treatment. If he survives, it is very unlikely he can go back working.
This prompted me to get myself checked. After telling my GP about my symptoms, he told me - yup, better get blood tests, stool samples, and a colonoscopy.
The colonoscopy turned out to be almost completely painless. If anything, the prep was more annoying than the procedure itself. And by far my biggest anxiety was the idea of getting my fears confirmed.
Luckily, there was nothing. Not even a single polyp. All other tests came back normal, too.
So, at least based on my experience, don't hesitate. It's really not bad.
EDIT: I took it without general anesthesia. I was asked if I wanted a mix of sedative and painkiller for the procedure, which I think was some benzo and fentanyl mix - to which I said yes. Where I'm from (Norway), propofol is not the standard for colonoscopy.
Honestly I couldn't really feel much difference when I was given the mix - I've been under general anesthesia before, and the second you get propofol you instantly from normal to "drunk".
Obviously it's individual, though. I've talked with people that have had the procedure without anything (because they had to drive there), and had minimal discomfort. And I've talked with people that needed sedatives / painkillers.
greenavocado
4 days ago
I had United Healthcare PPO and I got hit with a $3000 bill for the colonoscopy because of the conveniently out of network anesthesiologist anyway.
anonnon
a day ago
> anesthesiologist
Were you even offered a colonoscopy without sedation? In the US, many providers often require sedation for colonoscopies, regardless of your age or lack of comorbidities--which, ironically, makes me less inclined to get one. Meanwhile, in other countries, the SOP is to only provide sedation is it's absolutely needed.
bmau5
5 days ago
Which tests did you have run?
TrackerFF
5 days ago
A couple of different stool tests, which look for blood. From what I was told, if these come back positive that alone if enough to warrant a colonoscopy.