I am surprised in England you dont require a colonoscopy.
Quote from: obsidianom on February 15, 2014, 06:02:19 AMI am surprised in England you dont require a colonoscopy. It really depends on the hospital in the US. I think these assessments are much more homogenous in England than the US because you are looking at such a substantial size and population difference. However, I would imagine that they do require a colonoscopy in England if you are over age 50 or have certain risk factors. I had 5 evals in the US before my second transplant, plus contacted another dozen hospitals by phone. Only one of those required that I have a colonoscopy, but it was the one that was going to let me in to their clinical trial so I (very reluctantly) agreed. The surgeon said that it was my long history of taking prednisone, plus I stupidly mentioned that my grandfather died of colon cancer (when he was well into his 70s! And he was a borderline alcoholic!) When the local hospital personnel kept asking me why I was there for a colonoscopy, I would briefly explain and then always add "I *don't* have colon cancer!" I made them put me under general anaethesia. They wanted to give me an amnesiac (versed) but no painkiller because of my intolerance of opioids. I have had a lifetime to build up a mistrust of doctors and this was one of the worst ideas I'd ever heard. In the end they had to do it my way or not do it at all, and I was right, no colon cancer.
I agree on the anesthesia. I always have Propofol which is an anesthetic rather than versed. I hate versed . It lasts for hours after and is not always that effective. Propofol wears off very quickly and in a few minutes I can walk out with no after effects.