Non-Colonoscopy Colon Screening Procedures Holbrook NY

The colonoscopy is not the only screening tool for colon cancer. If you're not familiar with the other procedures, it's not surprising. A report in the July 2009 issue of American Journal of Preventive Medicine reported that most primary care physicians don't discuss all the screening options for colon cancer endorsed by the American College of Gastroenterology (ACG) and usually just recommend colonoscopy.

Robert Steven Festa, MD
516-588-4464
270 Union Ave
Holbrook, NY
Rana Zoeb, MD
74 Southaven Ave Ste C
Medford, NY
Anjali Sharma, MD
732-915-7789
208A Beaumont Pl
Coram, NY
Umme Habiba Begum, MD
315-798-1832
Suny At Stony Brook/Univ Hosp
Stony Brook, NY
Min Janice Lu, MD
212-263-6485
Hsc T 16 Rppm 020,
Stony Brook, NY
Stephen Edward Feffer, MD
631-741-1080
640 Hawkins Ave
Ronkonkoma, NY
Bradley David Cohen
(631) 581-4400
111 Carleton Ave
Islip Terrace, NY
Devina Prakash, MD
631-444-7720
100 Nicolls Rd
Stony Brook, NY
Maria T Grosse Perdekamp, MD
Hsc T15 040,
Stony Brook, NY
Stanley Zucker, MD
516-261-4400 x2861
1 Stony Rd
Stony Brook, NY
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Non-Colonoscopy Colon Screening Procedures

The colonoscopy is not the only screening tool for colon cancer. If you're not familiar with the other procedures, it's not surprising. A report in the July 2009 issue of American Journal of Preventive Medicine reported that most primary care physicians don't discuss all the screening options for colon cancer endorsed by the American College of Gastroenterology (ACG) and usually just recommend colonoscopy.

Screening methods for colon cancer vary in effectiveness, safety, invasiveness and cost and the ACG just updated its recommendations in 2009. If it's time for your colon cancer screening, here's what you should know.

Sigmoidoscopy. A sigmoidoscopy is similar to a colonoscopy. Your physician examines the lower third of the colon (instead of the whole colon) with a lighted scope and camera. This procedure generally requires less bowel preparation and patients remain awake. If your physician finds polyps or abnormal tissue, he can remove them during the sigmoidoscopy, so it's a preventative as well as a screening tool. The National Cancer Institute reports sigmoidoscopy misses two-thirds of existing tumors in women, twice the number missed in men, so it's less effective.

Fecal Occult Blood Test (FOBT). Cancers or polyps in the colon may bleed and the FOBT detects tiny amounts of blood in your stool. The FOBT is only a screening tool and cannot prevent colon cancer. According to the National Cancer Institute, a FOBT every one to two years in 50 to 80-year olds helps reduce colon cancer deaths by 15 to 33 percent. The ACG recommends the newest version of the FOBT...

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