GI Endoscopy · 1 min read
Retroflexion in the Right Colon: Maximizing Exposure
Learn the step-by-step colonoscopy technique for polyp removal, including preparation, procedural methods, and recovery guidelines. Expert insights for medical professionals
Clinical Bottom Line
| Endoscopic Maneuver | Optical Value | Primary Risk Factor |
|---|---|---|
| Straight Withdrawal | Visualizes 80% of the mucosa; heavily front-facing. | Routinely misses the proximal sides of massive haustral folds. |
| Right-Sided Retroflexion | Bending the scope entirely back on itself 180 degrees in the Cecum or Ascending colon. | Crucial for finding occult Sessile Serrated Lesions (SSLs) hidden behind the hepatic flexure. |
Revealing the Blind Spots
The human colon is not an entirely smooth pipe; it is partitioned by massive, crescent-shaped transverse ridges called haustral folds. When withdrawing a forward-viewing colonoscope from the cecum, the camera easily visualizes the distal side of these folds. However, the proximal side (the face pointing toward the cecum) is completely obscured, operating as a dangerous blind spot for hiding adenomas.
The U-Turn in the Ascending Colon
Historically, retroflexion (forcing the endoscope into a tight U-turn to look backwards) was reserved exclusively for scanning the rectum. In 2026, performing a secondary retroflexion explicitly in the Right Colon is highly encouraged among advanced endoscopists. By executing the maneuver in the wide-open cecum and slowly pulling the retroflexed scope back through the ascending colon, the physician systematically scrutinizes the proximal sides of the right-sided haustra, drastically improving the detection of highly aggressive Sessile Serrated Lesions.
Clinical guidelines summarized by the Gastroscholar Research Team. Last updated: 2026. This article is intended for physicians.
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