I've had 4 and everyone should know they were "a piece of cake". You are "out" and feel nothing. My last one:
Dr: Ready to start now?
Me: OK
Me: What I think is a just a minute or so later....When are you going to start?
Dr: I just finished.
You do wake up feeling like nothing had been done, with the exception of farting in the recovery room.....
Now the only inconvenience is the night before when you have to drink a couple quarts of something that literally flushes you out. It doesn't hurt; but you are on and off the crapper over a 4 to 6 hour period.
Twice I had a couple small polyps removed. The biopsies revealed they weren't cancerous (yet). Remember the disclaimers in Cologuard's commercials; say they can have false negatives and positives. They aren't 100% accurate. A colonoscopy is the way to go; if the find a polyp, they remove it right then.
Learn about colorectal cancer screening tests and at what age you should start them. Find out if you might be at high risk and may need a colonoscopy sooner.
www.cancer.org
For people at average risk
The American Cancer Society recommends that people at average risk* of colorectal cancer start regular screening at age 45. This can be done either with a sensitive test that looks for signs of cancer in a person’s stool (a stool-based test), or with an exam that looks at the colon and rectum (a visual exam). These options are listed below.
People who are in good health and with a life expectancy of more than 10 years should continue regular colorectal cancer screening through age 75.
For people ages 76 through 85, the decision to be screened should be based on a person’s preferences, life expectancy, overall health, and prior screening history.
People over age 85 should no longer get colorectal cancer screening.
*For screening, people are considered to be at average risk if they do not have:
- A personal history of colorectal cancer or certain types of polyps
- A family history of colorectal cancer
- A personal history of inflammatory bowel disease (ulcerative colitis or Crohn’s disease)
- A confirmed or suspected hereditary colorectal cancer syndrome, such as familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP) or Lynch syndrome (hereditary non-polyposis colon cancer or HNPCC)