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Lookup NU author(s): Professor Duncan Bell, Dr Matthew Rutter, Sanja Dogramadzi, Dr Charles Allen
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There are not enough trained colonoscopists to cope with the present recommended number of examinations required for diagnostic and surveillance purposes. If colorectal cancer screening is to be introduced, endoscopic examination of the large bowel needs to be easier to learn and significantly quicker to carry out. The 'Bladen system', first described in 1993, is a non-radiological method of visualising the path of the endoscope, using magnetic drive coils under the patient and a chain of sensors along the biopsy channel of the instrument. In 1998, results were published using a novel computer graphics system (the RMR system), in which a much more realistic image of the endoscope could be produced using the stored positional data from the Bladen system. The RMR system has been further refined to allow, for the first time ever, accurate measurement of the effect of the passage of a colonoscope along the bowel on the lengths of different segments of the large intestine. The results obtained in 232 patients undergoing colonoscopy are analysed. In 77 of the patients, a stiffening overtube is used to splint the sigmoid colon once the endoscope is at or beyond the splenic flexure. The mean time taken to pass the colonoscope across the transverse colon is significantly shorter (p < 0.001) when an overtube is used, despite it resulting in significant lengthening of the transverse colon. The routine use of a stiffening overtube can be expected to reduce the total procedure time by between 10 and 20%.
Author(s): Bell GD, Rowland RS, Rutter M, Abu-Sada M, Dogramadzi S, Allen C
Publication type: Article
Publication status: Published
Journal: Medical and Biological Engineering and Computing
Year: 1999
Volume: 37
Issue: 5
Pages: 605-611
Print publication date: 09/06/1999
ISSN (print): 01400118
ISSN (electronic): 1741-0444
Publisher: Springer
URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF02513355
DOI: 10.1007/BF02513355
PubMed id: 10723898
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