Skip to content
No results
Menu
  • Symptom & Conditions
  • Cancer Cure
  • Surgery
  • Health Tools
  • Our Experts
  • Contact Us
My Medicine Advisor logo
  • Symptom & Conditions
  • Cancer Cure
  • Surgery
  • Health Tools
  • Our Experts
  • Contact Us
My Medicine Advisor logo
Colonoscopy Recovery — vector diagram of the human digestive system showing stomach, small intestine, and large intestine without text labels
  • Screening

A Clear Guide to Colonoscopy Recovery, Hour by Hour

Colonoscopy recovery is usually smooth, but knowing the timeline helps. Here's what's normal in the first 24 hours—and the red flags you shouldn't ignore.

  • Dr. Calvin R. Beauregard, MD — Family & Preventive Medicine, Dr. Alicia M. Thornton, MD, MPH — Public Health & Epidemiology and Dr. Nathaniel G. Forsythe, MD, PhD — Translational Medicine & Research
  • June 16, 2026
Digital illustration of the digestive system highlighting the colon for a First Colonoscopy patient education article
  • Screening

Know What to Expect at Your First Colonoscopy

First colonoscopy nerves are normal — and most of what people dread is the easy part. You'll likely be asleep, and the prep matters more than the scope.

  • Dr. Calvin R. Beauregard, MD — Family & Preventive Medicine, Dr. Alicia M. Thornton, MD, MPH — Public Health & Epidemiology and Dr. Nathaniel G. Forsythe, MD, PhD — Translational Medicine & Research
  • June 16, 2026
Does a Colonoscopy Hurt human digestive tract anatomy illustration showing the digestive tract and colon location
  • Screening

Does a Colonoscopy Hurt? Know What You’ll Feel

Does a colonoscopy hurt? Honestly, the prep is the hard part — sedation keeps the exam itself comfortable, and most patients don't remember it.

  • Dr. Calvin R. Beauregard, MD — Family & Preventive Medicine, Dr. Alicia M. Thornton, MD, MPH — Public Health & Epidemiology and Dr. Nathaniel G. Forsythe, MD, PhD — Translational Medicine & Research
  • June 16, 2026
Robotic colonoscopy system used during colonoscopy sedation to guide the endoscope through the large intestine.
  • Screening

How to Choose the Right Colonoscopy Sedation for You

Colonoscopy sedation isn't one-size-fits-all—most get conscious sedation or propofol, ~2% skip it. Here's how to pick what fits you.

  • Dr. Calvin R. Beauregard, MD — Family & Preventive Medicine, Dr. Alicia M. Thornton, MD, MPH — Public Health & Epidemiology and Dr. Nathaniel G. Forsythe, MD, PhD — Translational Medicine & Research
  • June 16, 2026
Colonoscopy Take overview showing simplified digestive system with the large intestine highlighted for colonoscopy screening.
  • Screening

How Long a Colonoscopy Takes, From Check-In to Recovery

How long a colonoscopy takes depends on what's found — the exam runs 30–60 minutes, with about an hour of recovery and a 24-hour driving restriction after.

  • Dr. Calvin R. Beauregard, MD — Family & Preventive Medicine, Dr. Alicia M. Thornton, MD, MPH — Public Health & Epidemiology and Dr. Nathaniel G. Forsythe, MD, PhD — Translational Medicine & Research
  • June 15, 2026
What Happens During a Colonoscopy: rectum anatomy diagram showing the lower large intestine and anal canal.
  • Screening

What Happens During a Colonoscopy, From Start to Finish

What happens during a colonoscopy is more routine than most fear: you're sedated, the scope checks your full colon, and most polyps come out the same day.

  • Dr. Calvin R. Beauregard, MD — Family & Preventive Medicine, Dr. Alicia M. Thornton, MD, MPH — Public Health & Epidemiology and Dr. Nathaniel G. Forsythe, MD, PhD — Translational Medicine & Research
  • June 15, 2026
Medications and colon blood supply anatomy vector showing major arteries of the large intestine before colonoscopy.
  • Screening

Which Medications to Stop Before a Colonoscopy—and What to Keep

Medications to stop before a colonoscopy are a short list—blood thinners, iron, some diabetes drugs—while most you keep. Here's the timing to confirm.

  • Dr. Calvin R. Beauregard, MD — Family & Preventive Medicine, Dr. Alicia M. Thornton, MD, MPH — Public Health & Epidemiology and Dr. Nathaniel G. Forsythe, MD, PhD — Translational Medicine & Research
  • June 15, 2026
Colonoscopy Prep Options — Full human digestive system diagram showing the esophagus, stomach, small intestine, and large intestine.
  • Screening

Choosing Between SUTAB Pills and Liquid Colonoscopy Prep

A pill colonoscopy prep exists: SUTAB's 24 tablets clean about as well as liquid in trials but cost more and aren't always covered.

  • Dr. Calvin R. Beauregard, MD — Family & Preventive Medicine, Dr. Alicia M. Thornton, MD, MPH — Public Health & Epidemiology and Dr. Nathaniel G. Forsythe, MD, PhD — Translational Medicine & Research
  • June 15, 2026
Colonoscopy Prep Tips large intestine anatomy vector illustration showing cecum, colon, rectum, and sigmoid colon
  • Screening

Know What Gets You Through Colonoscopy Prep

Colonoscopy prep is the part everyone dreads — but it's fixable. Chill the solution, finish the second dose on time, and know when your colon is ready.

  • Dr. Calvin R. Beauregard, MD — Family & Preventive Medicine, Dr. Alicia M. Thornton, MD, MPH — Public Health & Epidemiology and Dr. Nathaniel G. Forsythe, MD, PhD — Translational Medicine & Research
  • June 15, 2026
What to eat before a colonoscopy: full digestive system anatomy showing stomach, intestines, and colon in a labeled medical illustration.
  • Screening

What to Eat Before a Colonoscopy to Prep the Right Way

What to eat before a colonoscopy comes down to two phases—low-fiber foods for several days, then clear liquids—and a few drinks to skip entirely.

  • Dr. Calvin R. Beauregard, MD — Family & Preventive Medicine, Dr. Alicia M. Thornton, MD, MPH — Public Health & Epidemiology and Dr. Nathaniel G. Forsythe, MD, PhD — Translational Medicine & Research
  • June 14, 2026
1 2 3 4 … 50
Next
My Medicine Advisor Logo

MyMedicineAdvisor.com is an evidence-based medical platform independently reviewed by 54 board-certified physicians, pharmacists, and healthcare specialists across 14 countries — covering 14 clinical specialties from cardiology and oncology to psychiatry and surgery. Every tool, calculator, and article undergoes a 5-layer clinical review process against WHO, CDC, NIH, and peer-reviewed literature before publication. Our mission is to make accurate, clinician-verified health information permanently free — empowering every patient, caregiver, and health-conscious reader worldwide to make confident, informed medical decisions.

Help & Support

  • Blog
  • About
  • Contact Us
  • Report a Correction
  • Medical Review Process
  • References & Sources
  • Author and Reviewer Directory
  • Community Guidelines and Comment Policy
  • For Clinicians & Researchers
  • Press and Media
  • Brand Press Kit
  • Editorial Policy & Medical Review Process
  • For Clinicians & Researchers — Collaborate
  • Medical Team
  • Global Medical & Wellness Advisory Board
  • Partnerships and Ads

Policies

  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Medical Disclaimer
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Accessibility Statement (WCAG 2.2 AA)
  • Corrections and Updates Policy
  • Ads and Affiliates
  • Cookie Settings
  • AI Transparency
  • Advertising and Sponsorship Guidelines
  • Ethics and Editorial Independence Policy
  • Security and Data Encryption Policy
  • Vulnerability Disclosure
  • Privacy Requests (GDPR/CCPA)

Popular Tools

  • Prescription Checker
  • Symptom Checker
  • Pregnancy Due Date
  • Pill Identifier
  • BMR Calculator
  • Eye Vision Test
  • Diabetes Risk Assessment
  • Medicine Dosage Calculator
  • All Tools

© 2026 MyMedicineAdvisor.com. All Rights Reserved.

The content on this website is reviewed by credentialed medical professionals and is intended for informational purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider with any questions regarding a medical condition.

Unauthorized reproduction or distribution of any content on this site is strictly prohibited.