| VA RESEARCH:
COLONOSCOPY EARLY IN DAY MAY BE BEST
Study suggests differences in patient
preparation and doctor fatigue play a role.
NOTE from Larry Scott, VA
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Early Morning Colonoscopies May
Find More Polyps
Study suggests differences in
patient preparation and doctor fatigue play a role
http://health.usnews.com/articles/health/healthday/2009/11/06/ea
rly-morning-colonoscopies-may-find-more-polyps.html
(HealthDay News) -- Early morning colonoscopies detect more polyps
than colon cancer screenings done later in the day, and the number
of polyps found decreases by the hour as the day progresses, a new
study has found.
Removing polyps is believed to
reduce the risk of colon cancer by 60 to 90 percent.
Researchers from the University of California, Los Angeles,
analyzed data
on
477 people who had colonoscopies in a one-year span at a Veterans
Affairs hospital. Colonoscopies that started at 8:30 a.m. or
earlier detected 27 percent more polyps per patient than
colonoscopies performed at a later time, according to the study.
The improved rate in the early morning may be due to improved
bowel preparation the night before, according to the researchers.
They also suggested that doctor fatigue
might also play a role in declining detection as the day wears on.
"We may find that setting a cap on the duration of endoscopic work
shifts or other types of adjustments may be helpful," Dr. Brennan
M.R. Spiegel, director of the UCLA/Veterans Affairs Center for
Outcomes Research and Education and a co-author of the study, said
in a UCLA news release.
He emphasized that colonoscopy is an effective way to screen for
colon cancer at any time of the day and said that people should
not worry about getting early morning procedures.
"The impact of appointment time for any individual is very, very
small," Spiegel said. "Patients should feel confident that
colonoscopy is helpful regardless of time of day and should be
more focused on the quality and experience of their doctor rather
than the time of their appointment."
The study is in the November issue of Clinical Gastroenterology
and Hepatology.
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TOPICS:
veterans, veterans' benefits, VA, Department of Veterans' Affairs,
research, colonoscopy |