stickmaker: (Default)
[personal profile] stickmaker
Got it out of the way in the Subject. If you weren't smart enough not to proceed, any gross-out is your own fault. :-)

At my annual physical exam this year my PCP (primary care physician) insisted I have a colonoscopy. I'd had exactly one before, over twenty years ago, and had _not_ enjoyed it. The preparation was easier this time (though still unpleasant). Well before my ride arrived I was extremely thirsty, actually becoming a little dehydrated by the time they were ready for me.

Normally, they use a mild sedation, and the patient is back to normal after two or three hours. However, I have what the doctor (the specialist doing the exam) called a "floppy colon" and they had to use a lot of extra air. Which meant a lot of extra sedation. I barely remember leaving the hospital. I had asked my mother to take me back home, since I was only expecting to be out of it for a couple of hours after the procedure. However, due to the extra sedation she decided to take me to _her_ home so she would clean house for a church group meeting while I slept. She had plenty of time; I was out for nearly five hours solid.

I'm home, now, and rapidly feeling better. And the good news is that except for hemorrhoids, I have a very healthy colon.

Now, the kicker to this unpleasant experience is, I'd told my regular doctor that I had hemorrhoids and aside from that my colon was fine.

I don't know why doctors won't believe me when I tell them something about my own body. You'd think they'd realize that I know what's going on inside it.

As a bonus, though, due to the extra sedation I'm not supposed to drive tomorrow. So that's another day off work. Another bonus is that because my "floppy colon" is in such good shape I shouldn't have to go through this for another ten years.

Date: 2006-07-18 11:58 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cafiorello.livejournal.com
Rod, their liability insurance carrier won't *allow* them to trust your knowledge of your own body. They need objective data they can put in your medical record. "He says he's fine, so I'm sure that even if he isn't, he won't sue us!" isn't going to go far. ;)

Cathy

Date: 2006-07-18 01:37 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] scott644.livejournal.com
Not to mention, the best time to catch developing problems is in the earliest stages - before we even begin to notice them.

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