Bowel cancer: Mayo Clinic Healthcare expert describes role hard-to-see polyps play in cancer risk

LONDON — Physicians screening people for bowel cancer are becoming increasingly concerned about a type of polyp once thought harmless: serrated polyps, sawtooth-edged growths in the colon that are flat, nearly translucent, and sometimes difficult to spot during colonoscopies. New research suggests people with serrated polyps should be checked more frequently for bowel cancer, a Mayo Clinic Healthcare expert writes in a commentary in the journal Gut. A serrated polyp after blue dye has been…
Source: News from Mayo Clinic - Category: Databases & Libraries Source Type: news