Background & Aims
An inadequately cleansed colon can lead to missed lesions, repeat procedures, increased cost, and complications from colonoscopy. Because obesity, with its known link to colorectal neoplasia, might be associated with inadequate bowel cleansing, we investigated the impact of increased body mass index (BMI) on quality of bowel preparation at colonoscopy.
Methods
All colonos-copy procedures performed at a tertiary referral center during a 4-month period were evaluated. Bowel preparation was assigned a unique composite outcome score that took into account a subjective bowel preparation score, earlier recommendation for follow-up colonoscopy as a result of inadequate bowel preparation, and the endoscopist's confidence in adequate evaluation of the colon. Univariate and multivariate logistic regression analyses were performed to identify the role of BMI in predicting an inadequate bowel preparation.
Results
During the study period, 1588 patients (59.1% female; mean age, 57.4 ± 0.34 years) fulfilled inclusion criteria. An abnormal BMI (>25) was associated with an inadequate composite outcome score (P = .002). In multivariate logistic regression analyses, both BMI >25 (P = .04) and >30 (P = .006) were retained as independent predictors of inadequate bowel preparation. Each unit increase in BMI increased the likelihood of an inadequate composite outcome score by 2.1%. Additional independent predictors of inadequate preparation exponentially increased the likelihood of an inadequate composite outcome score; 7 additional risk factors identified 97.5% of over-weight patients with an inadequate composite outcome score.
Conclusions
Obesity is an independent predictor of inadequate bowel preparation at colonoscopy. The presence of additional risk factors further increases the likelihood of a poorly cleansed colon.
Endoscopy to evaluate upper gastrointestinal bleeding was done for 482 patients over a 42-month period. Fifty-nine patients (12%) had chronic renal failure and upper gastrointestinal bleeding; the remaining 423 did not have renal failure. Angiodysplasia of the stomach or duodenum was the most frequent source of bleeding in patients with renal failure. Angiodysplasia (p less than 0.001) and erosive esophagitis (p less than 0.01) were significantly commoner causes of bleeding in the renal failure population than in the group without renal failure. Recurrent bleeding was also more frequent in patients with renal failure (25%) than in the other patients (11%). Angiodysplasia was the most frequent source of recurrent bleeding in patients with renal failure (53%) whereas peptic lesions were the most likely sources in those without renal failure (51%). These data show that the differential diagnoses of first and subsequent upper gastrointestinal bleeding sites differ for patients with and without chronic renal failure.
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