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Procedure

Polypectomy

Endoscopic removal of polyps from the colon or stomach.

Overview

Polypectomy is the removal of polyps — small growths in the digestive tract — using an endoscope. Most polyps are benign, but some can develop into cancer over years, so removing them is one of the most effective ways to prevent colon and stomach cancer. Removal usually happens during the same colonoscopy or endoscopy where the polyp is discovered.

When it’s recommended

  • Polyps detected during routine colonoscopy
  • Stomach polyps found on upper endoscopy
  • Surveillance follow-up for patients with prior polyps
  • Family history of colon cancer or polyposis syndromes
  • Iron-deficiency anaemia of unclear cause

What to expect

The polyp is removed during the endoscopy or colonoscopy itself. Small polyps are taken with a wire snare or biopsy forceps; larger or trickier ones may need advanced endoscopic techniques. Samples go to pathology to check for any pre-cancerous changes. You don't feel the removal — sedation keeps you comfortable throughout.

Preparation

Same as for the underlying endoscopy or colonoscopy. If you're on blood thinners, we'll discuss timing in advance because polypectomy carries a small bleeding risk.

Recovery

Most patients return to normal the same day. Avoid heavy meals immediately after; skip alcohol and vigorous exercise for a day. Pathology results are typically ready within a week — we'll guide on follow-up timing based on what was found.

This is general information, not a substitute for medical advice. For guidance specific to your case, please consult Dr. Ch. Saikumar or another qualified specialist.

Patient questions

Polypectomy — common questions

Answers to the questions we hear most often about polypectomy.

Is polyp removal painful?
You won't feel the polyp being removed — sedation keeps you comfortable throughout the colonoscopy or endoscopy in which polypectomy happens.
Are all polyps cancerous?
No — most polyps are benign. Some types can develop into cancer over years if left in place, which is why we remove them when found and send them for pathology to check for any pre-cancerous changes.
When will I get the pathology results?
Usually within a week. Based on the type and number of polyps removed, we'll guide on follow-up colonoscopy timing — anywhere from 3 to 10 years.
Are there risks with polypectomy?
Polypectomy is very safe. The main risk is bleeding from the polyp site — about 1–2% of cases — which usually settles on its own or is treated during the same procedure.