Thanks Emily.
I'm not exactly sure what happened, that's what I've been trying to find out. I've had four colonoscopies, and the first three were fine, but the last was very painful, both during and for months after. I could hear the Dr pumping air for what seemed like a very long time, and I've subsequently been told that my bowel was overinflated. I have also been told that I have 'multiple diverticula' which I can now feel, but there were no symptoms right up to getting on the table for the scope, and none found on the previous scopes. Can over inflation cause diverticula as opposed to outright perforation?
Recently I've been getting a lot of new pain, and I'm not sure whether this too is the diverticula or something else, and I don't feel I can expect an honest answer asking the health service that caused all this in the first place. Part of the investigation into this new pain is to be a cystoscopy, but I'm reluctant to consent to it in view of what happened previously.
The most common complication of a colonoscopy is perforation, which usually happens when the colon wall is thin.
https://www.e-ce.org/journal/view.php?number=7228
The risk goes up for age, co-morbidities (other medical conditions), being female, etc.
Why is this a concern for you?