A bronchoscopy is a procedure in which your healthcare provider examines the airways to your lungs with a thin, flexible, lighted tube called a bronchoscope.
This procedure may be done because:
Plan for your care and recovery after the procedure, especially if you are to have general anesthesia. Find someone to drive you home after the surgery. Allow for time to rest and try to find other people to help you with your day-to-day duties.
Follow your healthcare provider's instructions about not smoking before and after the procedure. Smokers heal more slowly after surgery. They are also more likely to have breathing problems during surgery. For this reason, if you are a smoker, you should quit at least 2 weeks before the procedure. It is best to quit 6 to 8 weeks before surgery. Also, your wounds will heal much better if you do not smoke after the surgery.
Follow any other instructions your provider gives you. Eat a light meal, such as soup or salad, the night before the procedure. Do not eat or drink anything after midnight or the morning before the procedure. Do not even drink any coffee, tea, or water. Do not swallow water when you brush your teeth.
You are given a local or general anesthetic. A local anesthetic may be sprayed into your nose and mouth to prevent gagging when the tube is passed through your mouth. If you have a local anesthetic, you may also be given a sedative to relax you. A general anesthetic relaxes your muscles, puts you to sleep, and prevents you from feeling pain.
Your healthcare provider will pass a tube into your mouth and throat, down the windpipe, and into the lungs. If your provider finds cancer cells, growths, sores, or other unhealthy tissue, he or she may remove them or take a sample. If a foreign body is found, it is usually removed.
You may go home soon after the procedure or stay in the hospital for several hours or overnight, depending on what was done and your condition after the procedure. You will feel some soreness in your neck. The soreness may last a few days after the procedure. You may be hoarse or have a cough. Lozenges or soothing gargles may be helpful.
Ask your healthcare provider what else you should do to be comfortable at home. Ask when you should come back for a checkup.
This procedure will help your healthcare provider diagnose and treat your breathing problems. It may relieve your symptoms if you had a foreign body in your airway.
Ask your healthcare provider how these risks apply to you.
Call your healthcare provider right away if:
Call your healthcare provider during office hours if: