Do you need an anesthesiologist for a colonoscopy? The answer is: it depends. It depends on 1) your health, 2) the conscious sedation skills of your gastroenterologist, and 3) the facility you have your colonoscopy at.
1) YOUR HEALTH. The majority of colonoscopies in the United States are performed under conscious sedation. Conscious sedation is administered by a registered nurse, under specific orders from the gastroenterologist. The typical drugs are Versed (midazolam) and fentanyl. Versed is a benzodiazepine, or Valium-like medication, that is superb in reducing anxiety, sleepiness, and producing amnesia. Fentanyl is a narcotic pain reliever, similar to a short-acting morphine. The combination of these two types of medications renders a patient sleepy but awake. Most patients can minimal or no recollection of the colonoscopy procedure when under the influence of these two drugs. I can speak from personal experience, as I had a colonoscopy myself, with conscious sedation with Versed and fentanyl, and I remembered nothing of the procedure.
If you are a reasonably healthy adult, you should be fine having the procedure under conscious sedation. Patients with high blood pressure, diabetes, asthma, obesity, mild to moderate sleep apnea, advanced age, or stable cardiac disease are have conscious sedation for colonoscopies in America every day, without significant complications.
Certain patients are not good candidates for conscious sedation, and require an anesthesiologist for sedation or general anesthesia. Included in this category are a) patients on large doses of chronic narcotics for chronic pain, who are tolerant to the fentanyl and are therefore difficult to sedate, b) certain patients with morbid obesity, c) certain patients with severe sleep apnea, and d) certain patients with severe heart or breathing problems.
2) THE CONSCIOUS SEDATION SKILLS OF YOUR GASTROENTEROLOGIST. Most gastroenterologists are comfortable directing registered nurses in the administration of conscious sedation drugs. Some, however, are not. These gastroenterologists will disclose this to their patients, and recommend that an anesthesiologist administer general anesthesia for the procedure.
3) THE FACILITY YOU HAVE YOUR COLONOSCOPY AT. Most endoscopy facilities have nurses and gastroenterologists comfortable with conscious sedation. Some do not. The facility you are referred to may have a consistent policy of having an anesthesiologist administer general anesthesia with propofol for all colonoscopies. If this is true, they should disclose this to you, the patient, before you start your bowel prep for the procedure. A facility which always utilizes general anesthesia means that you, the patient, will incur one extra physician bill for your procedure, from an anesthesiologist.
I refer you to an article from the New York Times, which summarizes this phenomenon in the New York region:
Filed under: ANESTHESIA PATIENT QUESTIONS BLOG Tagged: ambulatory anesthesia, Anesthesia, anesthesiology, colonoscopy, conscious sedation, fentanyl, midazolam, new york times, out of network anesthesiologist, propofol, RIchard Novak MD, RIck Novak MD, Versed
