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Colorectal Cancer Screening


 

Colorectal Cancer Screening

Welcome to our health education library. The information shared below is provided to you as an educational and informational source only and is not intended to replace a medical examination or consultation, or medical advice given to you by a physician or medical professional.

Colorectal cancer (cancer in the colon or rectum) is a leading cause of cancer deaths in the United States. But it doesn't have to be. When this cancer is found and removed early, the chances of a full recovery are very good. Because colorectal cancer rarely causes symptoms in its early stages, screening for the disease is important. It's even more crucial if you have risk factors for the disease. Learn more about colorectal cancer and its risk factors. Then talk to your doctor about being screened. You could be saving your own life.

 

Risk Factors for Colorectal Cancer

Your risk of having colorectal cancer increases if you:

  • Are 50 years of age or older.
  • Have a family history or personal history of colorectal cancer or adenomatous polyps.
  • Have a personal history of colorectal polyps, Crohn's disease, or ulcerative colitis.
  • Have a family history of multiple concurrent solid-tumor cancers.
  • Colorectal polyps

 

The Colon and Rectum

The Colon and Rectum

The Colon and Rectum

A DRE can detect a growth in the rectum or anus.

 

Waste from food you eat enters the colon from the small intestine. As it travels through the colon, the waste (stool) loses water and becomes more solid. Intestinal muscles push it toward the sigmoid-the last section of the colon. Stool then moves into the rectum, where it's stored until it's ready to leave the body during a bowel movement.

 

How Cancer Develops

Polyps are growths that form on the lining of the colon or rectum. Most are benign, which means they aren't cancerous. But over time, polyps can become malignant (cancerous). This occurs when cells in these polyps begin growing abnormally. In time, malignant cells invade more and more of the colon and rectum. The cancer may also spread to nearby organs or lymph nodes or to other parts of the body. Finding and removing polyps can help prevent cancer from ever forming.

 

Your Screening

Screening means looking for a medical problem before you have symptoms. During screening for colorectal cancer, your doctor will ask about your medical history, examine you, and do one or more tests.

 

History and Exam

  • Medical History: Your doctor will ask about your medical history. Mention if a family member has had colon cancer or polyps. Also mention any health problems you have had in the past.
  • Digital Rectal Exam (DRE): During a DRE, the doctor inserts a lubricated gloved finger into the rectum. The test is painless and takes less than a minute.

 

Possible Tests

  • Fecal Occult Blood Test: This test checks for occult blood in stool (blood you can't see). Hidden blood may be a sign of colon polyps or cancer. A small sample of stool is tested for blood in a laboratory. Most often, you collect this sample at home using a kit your doctor gives you. Follow the instructions carefully for using this kit. Avoid certain foods and medications before the test, as directed.
  • Barium Enema with Contrast: This test uses x-rays to provide images of the entire colon and rectum. Bowel prep is also needed the day before this test. You will be awake for the test, but you may be given medication to help you relax. At the start of the text, a radiologist (a doctor who specializes in imaging tests) inserts a soft tube into the rectum. The tube is used to fill the colon with a contrast liquid (barium). The liquid helps the colon show up clearly on the x-rays.
  • Virtual colonoscopy: This exam uses a series of x-ray photographs to create a three-dimensional view of the colon. During the procedure, you will lie on a table that is part of a special x-ray machine called an MRI machine. A small tube will be inserted into your rectum. Then, the table will move into the machine and photos will be taken of your colon. A computer will combine these photos to create a three-dimensional picture.

The Colon

The Colon

  • Scope Exams
    • Colonoscopy: This is the best test doctors have for finding and removing colorectal polyps. The day before the test, you will do a bowel prep to cleanse your colon. You will be given instructions for this. Just before the test, you are given a medication to make you sleepy. Then, a long, flexible, lighted tube called a colonoscope is gently inserted into the rectum and guided through the entire colon. Images of the colon are viewed on a video screen. Any polyps that are found are removed and sent to a lab for testing. If a polyp can't be removed, a sample of tissue is taken and the polyp is removed later during surgery.
    • Sigmoidoscopy: This test is similar to colonoscopy, but focuses only on the sigmoid colon and rectum. As with colonoscopy, bowel prep must be done the day before this test. You are awake during the procedure, but you may be given medication to help you relax. During the test, the doctor guides a thin, flexible, lighted tube called a sigmoidoscope through your rectum and lower colon. The images are displayed on a video screen. Polyps are removed, if possible, and sent to a lab for testing.

When to Call Your Doctor After a Test

Call your doctor if you have any of the following after any screening test:

  • Bleeding
  • Fever over 101°F
  • Abdominal pain

Risk and Complications of Scope Exams

  • Bleeding
  • A puncture or tear in the colon
  • Risks of anesthesia
  • Failure to detect a polyp

 

Discover leading-edge gastroenterology care. Call Digestive Disease Consultants of Orange County at 949.612.9090 or simply use the Request an Appointment form.

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