Quality bowel preparation for surveillance colonoscopy in patients with inflammatory bowel disease is a must

Andrew Nett, Fernando Velayos, Kenneth McQuaid, Andrew Nett, Fernando Velayos, Kenneth McQuaid

Abstract

Colonoscopy is routinely performed in patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) for surveillance of dysplasia. Thorough bowel preparation is necessary to facilitate lesion detection. Patients with IBD do not have poorer bowel preparation outcomes but may have decreased preparation tolerance affecting adherence to surveillance protocols. A low-fiber prepreparation diet may improve preparation tolerance without affecting preparation quality. The standard preparation regimen should consist of split-dose administration of a polyethylene glycol-based purgative. Low-volume, hyperosmolar purgatives may be considered in patients with previous preparation intolerance, heightened anxiety, stenotic disease, or dysmotility. Appropriate patient education is critical to enhance preparation quality.

Keywords: Bowel preparation; Dysplasia surveillance; Inflammatory bowel disease.

Published by Elsevier Inc.

Source: PubMed

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