Harmony Digestive and Liver Wellness

Gastroscopy Without Sedation: What Actually Happens During the Procedure?

Gastroscopy Without Sedation - Harmony

Patients go quiet when I mention gastroscopy. Then comes the question they were already thinking: Do I have to be sedated?

The honest answer is no. And for many of my patients, gastroscopy without sedation turns out to be far less daunting than they expected.

I’m Dr. Prakash Gupta, Consultant Gastroenterologist. Here’s the real picture.

Why We Do a Gastroscopy

  • Persistent reflux or heartburn
  • Unexplained nausea or vomiting
  • Difficulty swallowing
  • Upper abdominal pain
  • Abnormal liver or gut blood results

If you’ve been referred for one, there’s a specific reason. Don’t put it off.

What “Without Sedation” Actually Means

It doesn’t mean without anything.

Your throat is numbed with a local anaesthetic spray before we begin. That’s all. No IV line, no recovery room, no one needed to drive you home.

The Procedure, Step by Step

Before you arrive: Fast for at least six hours – nothing to eat or drink.

On arrival: The team reviews your history and medications. The throat spray is applied and given a few minutes to work.

During the procedure:

  • You lie on your left side
  • A small mouth guard is placed between your teeth
  • The endoscopist gently passes a thin flexible tube through your mouth and throat
  • Air is introduced to open the stomach walls for a clear view – this creates a full, bloated sensation, but it passes quickly
  • The entire examination takes five to ten minutes

The moment most patients brace for is the scope entering the throat. What they feel is pressure, not pain. Breathing steadily through your nose is the single most useful thing you can do – it helps the body relax, and the tube move more easily.

Straight After the Procedure

The throat numbness fades within thirty to sixty minutes.

After that:

  • Eat and drink normally
  • Drive yourself home
  • Return to work the same day
  • Hear your results immediately – and actually remember them

Who Is This Right For?

Gastroscopy without sedation works well for patients who:

  • Have had a gastroscopy before and know what to expect
  • Want minimal disruption to their day
  • Have no companion available to drive them home
  • Prefer to stay alert and hear results in real time

It’s not the right choice for everyone. Patients with significant anxiety, a pronounced gag reflex, or those needing a therapeutic procedure alongside the diagnostic look may genuinely be better off sedated. There’s no shame in that – the goal is the right outcome for you, not a badge for toughing it out.

The Honest Truth About Discomfort

I won’t tell you it’s completely comfortable.

The scope passing through the throat is briefly unpleasant. What I can tell you is that it’s short, and the majority of patients who were nervous beforehand tell me afterwards it was nothing as they feared.

When to Ask About It

If you’ve been referred for a gastroscopy, ask your specialist directly whether the unsedated route suits your case.

This non-invasive test helps investigate symptoms such as:
•Bloating
•Excessive gas
•Abdominal pain
•Diarrhoea or constipation
•Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS)

Our tests are:
•Evidence-based and accurate, using the latest standards
•Convenient – performed from the comfort of your home or in-clinic
•Interpreted by a specialist gastroenterologist
If you’ve been struggling with unexplained gut symptoms, a breath test may help uncover the cause and guide targeted treatment.
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