GI Endoscopy · 1 min read
The Top 5 Novice Endoscopy Errors
Clinical Bottom Line
| Common Fellow Error | Technical Consequence | Corrective Heuristic |
|---|---|---|
| Red-Out (Pushing Blindly) | Driving the scope against the mucosal wall; high risk of perforation. | "If you see red, stop, pull back, and find the black hole (lumen)." |
| Ignoring Paradoxical Movement | Pushing the scope in creates a massive loop; the tip actually retreats backwards. | Aggressively execute clockwise pull-back (reduction) to collapse the sigmoid loop. |
| Over-Insufflation | Massively dilating the colon artificially lengthens the bowel, making reaching the cecum physically impossible. | Use minimal air on insertion; only inflate heavily on withdrawal. |
Breaking Instinctual Habits
First-year gastroenterology fellows universally fall victim to the exact same set of mechanical traps. The fundamental human instinct when attempting to navigate a tube through a dark hallway is to forcefully push forward. In flexible endoscopy, pushing forward is frequently the exact wrong maneuver, leading to massive looping, prolonged procedure times, and extreme patient discomfort.
The Fixation on the Dials
Novices often obsess over forcefully cranking the Up/Down macro dials to artificially steer the tip. Experienced endoscopists utilize the dials minimally, relying instead on right-hand torque (twisting the scope shaft itself) to naturally glide the camera around flexures. Furthermore, fellows frequently fail to utilize the water jet. Encountering a pool of opaque bile in the right colon, they attempt to stare through it, completely missing flat adenomas hidden beneath. The 2026 standard dictates aggressive, continuous washing of all opaque fluid to ensure a pristine mucosal evaluation upon withdrawal.
Clinical guidelines summarized by the Gastroscholar Research Team. Last updated: 2026. This article is intended for physicians.
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