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Copyright ©2014 Baishideng Publishing Group Co.
World J Gastroenterol. Mar 21, 2014; 20(11): 2741-2745
Published online Mar 21, 2014. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v20.i11.2741
Table 1 Bowel preparation under special conditions
Special conditionConsiderations for appropriate bowel preparation
ElderlyAvoid NaP to reduce risk of electrolyte imbalance and phosphate accumulation
Childhood1.25 mg/kg PEG for 4 d with liquid diet on the fourth day
PregnancyPEG may be preferable to NaP
BreastfeedingInterrupt breastfeeding during and after bowel preparation
Severe/chronic constipationExtend the liquid diet requirement
Alternate the bowel preparation agent (PEG or NaP)
Provide adjunctive laxative agents (magnesium citrate, bisacodyl, or senna)
Apply a combined bowel preparation agent (both PEG and NaP) or double the dosage of PEG solution
Stroke, dementiaIf patients have difficulty swallowing, provide the bowel preparation agent via endoscopic irrigation pump or nasogastric tube
IBDNaP and sodium picosulfate plus magnesium citrate should be avoided because of mucosal damage and irritation
DiabetesAppropriate dose and proper tempo of fluid intake is important because of delayed colonic transit time
NaP should be avoided due to possible risk of hyperphosphatemia, metabolic acidosis, and renal failure
HypertensionNaP should be cautiously applied in patients taking a drug that affects renal function (diuretics, ARB, ACEi)
Chronic kidney diseaseNaP preparation is not recommended because of increased risk of renal dysfunction
Congestive heart failurePEG solution should be cautiously applied because of an association with increased intravascular volume
NaP preparation is not recommended because of electrolyte imbalance and volume loss
Lower GI bleedingPEG solution may be more effective than enema
If a rectal bleeding focus is suspected or severe bleeding is present, enema can be useful