Anonymous wrote:Clenpiq was less to drink but it gave me a headache and made me horribly nauseous. MoviPrep was better but had to combine it with laxatives to get fully clean.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Someone just posted on here how a friend or neighbor just died of colon cancer and he said he had done the poop in a box thing and it missed his cancer. Poop in a box won't catch precancerous polyps as I understand it.
Color guard only detects blood in the sample. Precancerous polyps don’t bleed. Slow growing, relatively large, cancerous tumors sometimes bleed. The colonoscopy removes the polyps, some pre-cancerous, before blood is present in a sample and before it can become cancerous.
I do not understand how Colorguard gives any peace of mind (unless you only want to know when you have a big ole bleeding tumor).
It's called Cologuard, not colorguard. Color guard is a flag ceremony.
Secondly it has nothing to do with blood at all. It picks up cancerous DNA, not blood. What it doesn't do is detect precancerous polyps, which can turn into cancer. It's repeatee every 3 to 5 years, unlike a colonoscopy, which is every 10.
Yes, most insurances pay for a colonoscopy if Cologuard finds something.
You just made a lot of cr@p up here, pardon the pun.
Yep. I just received my cologuard and my doctor told me if I pooped in the box I'd get a test in 3 years and if I did the colonoscopy it would be 10. I'm only 45 and have no risk. I think I'm going to poop in the box.
Did recommend getting colonoscopy when I turn 50 however just to be safe
I had no symptoms, no family history and no cancer marker in blood tests and still colon cancer found at my first screening colonoscopy. I thank god I didn’t fall for the cologuard. But most people aren’t so unlucky.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Someone just posted on here how a friend or neighbor just died of colon cancer and he said he had done the poop in a box thing and it missed his cancer. Poop in a box won't catch precancerous polyps as I understand it.
Color guard only detects blood in the sample. Precancerous polyps don’t bleed. Slow growing, relatively large, cancerous tumors sometimes bleed. The colonoscopy removes the polyps, some pre-cancerous, before blood is present in a sample and before it can become cancerous.
I do not understand how Colorguard gives any peace of mind (unless you only want to know when you have a big ole bleeding tumor).
It's called Cologuard, not colorguard. Color guard is a flag ceremony.
Secondly it has nothing to do with blood at all. It picks up cancerous DNA, not blood. What it doesn't do is detect precancerous polyps, which can turn into cancer. It's repeatee every 3 to 5 years, unlike a colonoscopy, which is every 10.
Yes, most insurances pay for a colonoscopy if Cologuard finds something.
You just made a lot of cr@p up here, pardon the pun.
Yep. I just received my cologuard and my doctor told me if I pooped in the box I'd get a test in 3 years and if I did the colonoscopy it would be 10. I'm only 45 and have no risk. I think I'm going to poop in the box.
Did recommend getting colonoscopy when I turn 50 however just to be safe
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Someone just posted on here how a friend or neighbor just died of colon cancer and he said he had done the poop in a box thing and it missed his cancer. Poop in a box won't catch precancerous polyps as I understand it.
Yes--please get the colonoscopy. Mine discovered a very small tumor that was causing no symptoms that never would have been picked up by a stool test. Colon cancer is the most preventable cancer there is.
Yet, so many die from it every day
This x 1,000.
ColoGuard has low sensitivity for detecting colorectal cancer (70%-75% using colonoscopy as the criterion standard). Sensitivity is also low for precursor lesions, approximately 20% to 25% for advanced adenomas and less than 5% for advanced sessile serrated polyps. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6771036/
I have no colon cancer in my family and no known risk factors but was diagnosed (via colonoscopy) at age 44. Thank God it was caught at stage III, which is not early but I'm lucky enough to still be here 7 years later.
How? Until recently, the recommendation was 50. Now it's 45. I would assume there had to have been some circumstances that led you to have a colonoscopy at 44
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Not 40 in mine. I took 12 pills at each stage of the prep, so 24 total. They are like capsule vitamins. Not bad at all. You drink water with them (or Gatorade if you want).
That sounds amazing. I don't know what mine was called but it was the old school prep with two gallon containers of water that I mixed with powder, one at night, one in the morning (or middle of the night). It was awful. I definitely knew I was cleaned out and was dry heaving with basically water coming out by the end.
That's Golytely. It's horrendous. I would take 40 pills if that's what it took to avoid the Golytely again.